James Ellman holds a bachelor’s degree in history and economics from Tufts University and an MBA from Harvard. He has also written Hitler’s Great Gamble: A New Look at German Strategy, Operation Barbarossa, and the Axis Defeat in World War II (Stackpole, 2019). He lives in Hawaii.
"""In his new book MacArthur Reconsidered, Ellman pronounces MacArthur a poor wartime commander whose ""insubordination"" was a threat to the Republic."" --New York Journal of Books History often elevates certain figures higher than the merit of their achievements deserve. As James Ellman reveals in a steady, forceful, and engaging manner, Douglas MacArthur is a case in point. With the skills that an experienced trial lawyer would envy, Ellman carefully examines MacArthur's record from a number of vantage points and makes it clear that the five-star general's heightened reputation as a military strategist and commander is far from warranted. In this lively, well-researched book, James Ellman deflates the MacArthur myth and persuasively shows how MacArthur's political connections, tireless self-promotion, and habitual lying enabled him to escape the consequences of his numerous failures and acquire an undeserved reputation for military genius."