David A. Smiths essential new study of Americas greatest strategic thinker emphasises the intellectual life of the man who created and deployed Sea Power theory in a fast-changing world. That life stretched from a West Point childhood through the Civil War and service in distant waters to international celebrity. Mahans ideas retain their power, and highlight the need for great ideas as we face an uncertain future. Andrew Lambert, Laughton Professor of Naval History, Kings College and author of No More Napoleons: How Britain managed Europe from Waterloo to World War One
"A page turner that vividly recounts the story of Mahan's life, Smiths narrative contextualizes Mahan's writings and his sea power theories. Indispensable reading for those wishing to understand one of historys most important naval strategic thinkers. Kevin D. McCranie, author of Mahan, Corbett, and the Foundations of Naval Strategic Thought
There has been a great deal of important scholarship on Alfred Thayer Mahan in the last few decades, but what has been missing is a biography of Mahan as a person: a son, father, husband, sailor, pundit, and friend; that relational side that is missing somewhat from all this excellent new scholarship. This work absolutely corrects many of the longstanding myths about this complicated and brilliant man. John T. Kuehn, PhD, professor of military history, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College
A rich, insightful, and beautifully crafted study that strips away caricature and reveals how Mahan wove life experiences, historical insights, and the threads of contemporary thinking into a compelling systemic understanding of how the modern globalized world works. In an era when China has embraced a distinctly Mahanian strategic outlook and became Mahans most avid readership, this longoverdue biography could not be more timely. Fifty years after the Wests last major biography of Mahan, the global security environment has changed profoundly into one marked by sweeping globalization, trade-driven interdependence, and mounting systemic competition particularly at seaan expansive and more complex version of the very world his ideas sought to illuminate for pragmatic naval purpose. This is not an exercise in nostalgia; it is strategic clarity delivered at precisely the right momenta superb reintroduction to Mahan and reaffirmation of why his thinking and insights are more relevant than ever." Peter D. Haynes, author of Toward a New Maritime Strategy: American Naval Thinking in the Post-Cold War Era