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After a long wait the new edition of Weyers Flottentaschenbuch arrived by post from a friend's shop in Berlin.
This book is a little wonder. It is the size of a dictionary with A5 size pages. It covers the navies of the world in German name alphabetical order (Canada becomes Kanada).
It has a first half which covers the navies by tables showing the status and capabilities of their ships.
The second half features beautiful line drawings and photos of the ships. As the drawing are to the same scale the relative sizes of vessels can be compared.
Sadly the editor and author, Werner Globke, has retired so this may be the last edition.
I have bought copies since I discovered it for the first time as a schoolboy on an Interrail trip in Hamburg in 1973.
Secondhand volumes going back to the 1930s can be found on Amazon but the current one is so far only available in Germany.
The Internet has made such books too expensive to produce. But it is nice to have a source which does not go down (rain has kept me offline for 24 hours)
This book is a little wonder. It is the size of a dictionary with A5 size pages. It covers the navies of the world in German name alphabetical order (Canada becomes Kanada).
It has a first half which covers the navies by tables showing the status and capabilities of their ships.
The second half features beautiful line drawings and photos of the ships. As the drawing are to the same scale the relative sizes of vessels can be compared.
Sadly the editor and author, Werner Globke, has retired so this may be the last edition.
I have bought copies since I discovered it for the first time as a schoolboy on an Interrail trip in Hamburg in 1973.
Secondhand volumes going back to the 1930s can be found on Amazon but the current one is so far only available in Germany.
The Internet has made such books too expensive to produce. But it is nice to have a source which does not go down (rain has kept me offline for 24 hours)