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by: Monte Howell
Publisher: iuniverse.com, 2002
Reviewed by: J Gooding . Barns & Noble : The Young Draftee Published June 2002 (Excerpt) Of all of the stories to come out about world War II few are written about the young 18 year old inexperienced soldiers who were thrust into a brutal part of the war. None were professional soldiers, most were draftees or civilians who were allowed to play soldier for the duration of the war. This true story identifies those everday occurrences which a "young soldier" experiences as he goes through army basic training, being sent overseas to an infantry replacement depot in New Guinea, never quite knowing where he was or where he was or wher he was going. Finally experiencing the horrors of combat in Leyte and Luzon, Philippines and wondering if his luck was going to see him through these ordeals. The war in the South Pacific was beyond being called brutal, savage war or some other words, which can explain what these men went through. The terrain, climate and disease those men had to fight besides the enemy was unbearable. The war in the South Pacific was a war without mercy. This is a descriptive march through history. |
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