Ken Rutsky
Posts: 14
Joined: 5/8/2000 From: Saratoga Springs, NY, USA Status: offline
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Cross of Iron, by Willi Heinrich (as many others have suggested) is fantastic. The prose is spare, and having the story being told from constantly changing viewpoints adds to the tension of the story. It is interesting to compare the book to the (wonderful) movie that it inspired.
Another book I enjoyed quite a bit was called Squadron Airborne; I forget the author's name. It's about two days in a British fighter squadron during the Battle of Britain, with an interesting ensemble of characters. I doubt it's still in print, but my battered old copy (in a crate somewhere) was a Bantam paperback, so it might not be too hard to find (and it'll probably be cheap, to boot!).
Tim Obrien's interlocking story collection The Things They Carried is a modern literary classic, and one that is very accessible to the average grognard (I was in a lit class last semester that studied it, and was amazed that footnotes were needed to explain Claymores, C-Rations, etc.). The stories are tough and unsentimental, concerning a platoon of GIs in Vietnam (the author is a veteran of that war); a couple veer into surrealism, but still feel somehow true to the experience of war (though I have nothing to compare it to in my own experience).
Hackett's Third World War is an interesting, strategic-level account of the greatest war that never was.
These last few books are non-fiction, but it's interesting to compare them to their fictional cousins:
Everything We Had by Al Santoli is a collection of true anecdotes from many Vietnam vets.
One Soldier, by John Shook, is another interesting grunt's eye view of 'Nam.
MacDonald's Company Commander is good for WWII.
Ken Rutsky
[This message has been edited by Ken Rutsky (edited September 24, 2000).]
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Though it be broken --
Broken again -- still it's there,
The moon on the water
Chosu
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