AUTOGRAPHED Beyond Valor: World War II's Rangers/Airborne Veterans Reveal 1ST ED
AUTOGRAPHED 1ST EDITION
Beyond Valor: World War II's Ranger and Airborne Veterans Reveal the Heart of Combat
Description
Review The success of Tom Brokaw's Greatest Generation has sparked
a renewed interest in books about World War II and the people who fought in
it. Patrick K. O'Donnell maintains, however, that behind those official
histories and carefully crafted memoirs lies a "hidden war"--"a bottled up,
buried version shielded even from family members because many of the memories
are too painful to discuss." In Beyond Valor, O'Donnell brings this hidden war
to the surface, allowing men from the elite forces to tell their own stories,
thus creating a fascinating combat history of WWII. O'Donnell introduces
readers to some of the greatest of the greatest generation--men such as Robert
Kinney of the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, wounded by a mortar at Anzio
("it tore my fanny open, took a big chunk of meat out of there--I could afford
that"). While in the hospital, wounded members of the regiment were asked by
one of their officers to return to the front: We all went down, about forty of
us in casts, bandages, arms in slings and everything. He said, "Your buddies
up there are catching hell and we've got to go back if we can. You don't have
to, we're not going to order you, but we're looking for volunteers." We said,
"Hell, we'll go." We had just the best-spirited bunch of scrappers you ever
saw. There are also stories about compassion in the midst of carnage. Albert
Hassenzahl of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment was seriously injured on a
drop during the Normandy invasion. While waiting to be rescued, the wind blew
his blanket off him. A man on an adjacent stretcher reached over and carefully
tucked the blanket in around Hassenzahl. The other man was a German POW. "I
didn't say a word to him, but I was able to move my head a little and looked
over at him ... neither of us said a word, but mentally I might have said
'thank you' with my eyes and he might have said 'you're welcome' with his."
Though it will certainly appeal to them, O'Donnell insists that Beyond Valor
is not aimed at war buffs--it's for the soldiers themselves. "My work has been
one of preservation, done in gratitude for a generation that sacrificed so
much." By sharing these stories, O'Donnell has helped to preserve and honor
their memory. --Sunny Delaney Read more From Publishers Weekly Over a hundred
individual veterans' vignettes are drawn from oral histories and
electronically transmitted memoirs ("e-histories") in this assemblage of
firsthand accounts of the WWII American Airborne, Ranger and other special
units. Instrumental to the collection of these stories was O'Donnell's
special-interest Web site, The Drop Zone ( which
functions as a "virtual museum" of vet experience. The book itself, after a
brief introduction sketching the origins of the special units, is comprised of
chapters devoted to a dozen operations in the European theater, from initial
forays at Dieppe and North Africa, through Italy and Normandy, to final months
in Holland and Germany. One chapter covers the home front experiences of
African-American troops in the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion. O'Donnell
furnishes a cogent introductory overview of each operation, after which a
number of veterans describe their memories of the action. Most of these
remembrances are work-a-day, telegraphic run-downs of key situations beach
landings and marches to lines, a night in the cargo hold of a destroyer, a
diversionary attack on a fortified town that leave a lot of emotional baggage
under the surface, in favor of often mortal logistics (some of which involves
atrocities on both sides). Most fail to make their situations vivid or
compelling to the uninitiated. (Mar. 12) Forecast: While this title is a Main
Selection of the Military History Book Club, it assumes a fair amount of
interest in and familiarity with its subjects, and won't get much beyond the
buff market. Nevertheless, scholars will find it a font of well-documented
primary source material and developers might comb it for film or TV-worthy
vignettes. Meanwhile, the Drop Zone, which has gotten press mentions in the
Wall Street Journal, USA Today and other papers, may generate further
sales.Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc. Read more See all
Editorial Reviews
Features:
Product Details:
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: Free Press; First Edition edition (February 15, 2001)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0684873842
ISBN-13: 48
Product Dimensions: 12.8 x 1.2 x 9.8 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
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