Had Lieutenant George S. Patton not served on the southern border during
the Mexican Expedition of 1916, there might never have been a General
George S. Patton who took the world by storm as a bold and daring
commander during World War II. Relying on Patton's detailed personal
journals of his eight months in Mexico, Michael Lee Lanning describes
the young officer's exploits during the hunt for Pancho Villa. As an
aide to General John Pershing, Patton learned leadership and logistics
from the man who would soon command American forces in World War I.
Begging for a field command, he received it--and led the first motorized
attack in U.S. military history and may or may not have killed two of
Villa's lieutenants. The press ate it up, and Patton learned not only
how much he loved attention, but how to promote himself. In Mexico are
the roots of Patton the World War II general, and Lanning tells the
story deftly, focusing on Patton the man as well Patton the commander,
and always casting an eye forward to Patton's future career. This is how
Patton became Patton.