Preface
Acknowledgments
Maps
1. The Militia Myth: Canadian Arms to Confederation
2. Making an Army: Beginnings
3. A Militia under Arms: Sam Hughes’s Army
4. Becoming Professional: Arthur Currie’s Army
5. Losing Professionalism: The Interwar Years
6. McNaughton’s Army: The Long Wait
7. Into Battle: Sicily and Italy, July 1943–June 1944
8. Into Battle: Northwest Europe and Italy, June 1944–May 1945
9. The Professional Army, 1945–1968
10. Professionalism under Siege, 1968–2001
11. Afghanistan and the Remaking of the Army
12. Conclusion
Notes
A Selected Bibliography of Secondary Sources
Illustration Credits
Index
J.L. Granatstein is the former director and CEO of the
Canadian War Museum and a distinguished research professor emeritus
of history. He is an award-winning author of more than sixty books
on Canadian political and military history, the recipient of
numerous honorary degrees, and an Officer of the Order of
Canada.
"Granatstein is, without doubt, one of Canada’s pre-eminent military historians ... [Should any] Canadian wish to become functionally knowledgable about our army, this book is an excellent place to start." - Steven Dieter (The Globe and Mail) "[An] immensely readable tour de force through the political and battlefield swamps of army history." - Ron Lowman (Toronto Star) "Everyone who cares for and about Canada's army will be pleased with Granatstein’s superb book." - Major Michael McNorgan (Canadian Military Journal)
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |