Exceptional work by a cavalryman who lived in the wake of the cavalry's mechanized transformation. Matt Morton produced a critical slice of history which is often misunderstood, overlooked, and/or misintrepted. The Divorce and how it went down within the cavalry branch in the 1930's between the loyal horse supporters and their brothers moving toward gasoline and mechanization is over-shadowed by the outcome of the WWII and the changes that came from the after action reviews from the reconnaissance forces that fought in N. Africa, Italy, and across norther Europe. How did we go from horse to today's armored cavalry? It is a complicated tail of loyalty versus reality, culture versus adaptation, and the age old struggle to evolve in the face of a changing environment...something the U.S. Army has sometimes struggled to do as rapidly as needed. Morton's work tells this story and is a must read for all modern day Armor officers, Armored Cavalryman, and infantrymen who serve as reconnaissance leaders. Well researched, it captures the personalities of the time (Marshall, McNair, Patton, Truscott, Herr, and others) and reminds the reader how important people and personalities are during a time when an organization needs its leaders to lead change. We are in one of those times right now and the reader can draw a number paralells from the pages. As a the current Regimental Commander of one Cavalry Regiments that played a vital role in this transformation I found it exilerating and could not put it down. I have spent 20+ years in the Armor/Cavalry Branch and now for the first time feel like I truly understand how and why my branch of service (Armor) looks and acts like it does. This is a priceless piece of work, so necessary for the preservation of this subtle but significant evolution in U.S. military history.