In 1975, James Jones—the American author whose novels From Here to
Eternity and The Thin Red Line had made him the preeminent voice of
the enlisted man in World War II—was chosen to write the text for an
oversized coffee table book edited by former Yank magazine art
director Art Weithas and featuring visual art from World War II. The
book was a best seller, praised for both its images and for Jones’s
text, but in subsequent decades the artwork made it impossible for the
book to be reproduced in its original form, and it fell out of print
and was forgotten. This edition of WWII makes available for the first
time in more than twenty years Jones’s stunning text, his only
extended nonfiction writing on the war that defined his generation.
Moving chronologically and thematically through the complex history of
the conflict, Jones interweaves his own vivid memories of soldiering
in the Pacific—from the look on a Japanese fighter pilot’s face as
he bombed Pearl Harbor, so close that Jones could see him smile and
wave, to hitting the beach under fire in Guadalcanal—while always
returning to resounding larger themes. Much of WWII can be read as a
tribute to the commitment of American soldiers, but Jones also pulls
no punches, bluntly chronicling resentment at the privilege of the
officers, questionable strategic choices, wartime suffering,
disorganization, the needless loss of life, and the brutal realization
that a single soldier is ultimately nothing but a replaceable cog in a
heartless machine. As the generation that fought and won World War II
leaves the stage, James Jones’s book reminds us of what they
accomplished—and what they sacrificed to do so.
Les mer
A Chronicle of Soldiering
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226181097
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter