Often quoted but seldom read, Alfred Thayer Mahan is sometimes dismissed as little more than a pedantic and parochial advocate of big fleets and decisive naval battles. In this brilliant new intellectual biography, Nicholas Lambert demonstrates, to the contrary, that Mahan was actually a profound analyst of the strategic implications of globalization. Original, provocative, and compelling, Lamberts book traces the evolution of Mahans thought and demonstrates its contemporary relevance. Essential reading for scholars, strategists, and naval officers alike.Prof. Aaron L. Friedberg, Princeton University. Author of Getting China Wrong and A Contest for Supremacy: China, America, and the Struggle for Mastery in Asia
"Although the title suggests a rather narrowly focused account, The Neptune Factor is a far-reaching reappraisal of Mahan and his interpreters from the 1890s to the present. Lamberts insightful and readable book places Mahans work firmly within the context of his times. In the course of so doing the author explodes a number of widely accepted Mahan myths and shows the origins and processes of the American naval revival and subsequent rise to world power status to have been far more nuanced and complicated than suggested by earlier authors. Both historians and warfighters should benefit by reading this provocative book."Prof. Ronald H. Spector (Emeritus), author of Professors of Warand Eagle Against the Sun
"This book is essential reading for all serious students of naval history and contemporary geopolitics. Nick Lamberts discovery of important new archival sources and a careful reconsideration of Mahans well-known published writing, has enabled him to produce a transformative study of Captain Alfred Mahans signature ideanamely the concept of Sea Power. He shows that Mahan, far from being a simplistic advocate of decisive battle, had a sophisticated understanding of the connections between naval force and international economics. Lamberts revelations will go far to restore Mahans stature as the premier thinker on the role of navies in world affairs."Prof. Jon T. Sumida (Emeritus), author of Inventing Grand Strategy and Teaching Command: The Classic Works of Alfred Thayer Mahan Reconsidered