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Last Chapter

by Ernie Pyle

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902302,080 (4.09)1
"No man in this war has so well told the story of the American fighting man as American fighting men wanted it told," wrote Harry Truman. "He deserves the gratitude of all his countrymen." THIS is the final book of Ernie Pyle's war reporting. After Africa, Italy, and D-Day on the European continent, Pyle took it the hard way again. There was still the Pacific war to win, and where the fighting was Ernie had to go, soul-sick though he was with the thousands of scenes of death and destruction he had already witnessed. He was attached to the Navy early in 1945. In the Marianas first and then living with the boys who flew the B-29s over the Japanese homeland, Pyle was experiencing a side of the war that was new to him. Next he joined an aircraft carrier on the invasion of Okinawa. He made the landing with the Marines and saw Okinawa secured. Then his luck ran out. A Japanese bullet killed Ernie Pyle on April 17th, 1945 on Ie Shima, and Americans lost their greatest and best-loved correspondent. Millions mourned the going of this modest man who wrote of the war with all honesty and no pretensions, and whose writings will stand as one of the most vital records of the struggle. LAST CHAPTER is a brief, brave little book to complete that record permanently. There is a sixteen-page picture section and an index of names and places.… (more)
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Ernie Pyle, by virtue of his journalistc skill, love for the American GI and his ability to gain the confidence of officer and men alike, brings us another outstanding frontline tour. This was his only tour of the Pacific Theatre, a theatre where he was untimately to meet his death.

This noted WWII correspondent shared the meals, beds and dangers of those he sought to interview. His gentle humor and approachability drew soldiers to him to tell their stories.

Ernie Pyle is able as no other correspondent I've read to place us so intimately into the scenes of war--a unit of B-29s, aboard a carrier and in the midst of the invasion of Okinawa with a company of 1st Marine Division men. On Ie Shima, an island near Okinawa , Ernie Pyle took a bullet in the temple while sharing a frontline position with the Marines. ( )
  seoulful | May 20, 2010 |
This book is a collection of Pyle’s dispatches during the short time he spent in the pacific theater of operations with the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps until his death on the morning of April 18, 1945. ( )
  mrellis64 | Nov 9, 2008 |
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"No man in this war has so well told the story of the American fighting man as American fighting men wanted it told," wrote Harry Truman. "He deserves the gratitude of all his countrymen." THIS is the final book of Ernie Pyle's war reporting. After Africa, Italy, and D-Day on the European continent, Pyle took it the hard way again. There was still the Pacific war to win, and where the fighting was Ernie had to go, soul-sick though he was with the thousands of scenes of death and destruction he had already witnessed. He was attached to the Navy early in 1945. In the Marianas first and then living with the boys who flew the B-29s over the Japanese homeland, Pyle was experiencing a side of the war that was new to him. Next he joined an aircraft carrier on the invasion of Okinawa. He made the landing with the Marines and saw Okinawa secured. Then his luck ran out. A Japanese bullet killed Ernie Pyle on April 17th, 1945 on Ie Shima, and Americans lost their greatest and best-loved correspondent. Millions mourned the going of this modest man who wrote of the war with all honesty and no pretensions, and whose writings will stand as one of the most vital records of the struggle. LAST CHAPTER is a brief, brave little book to complete that record permanently. There is a sixteen-page picture section and an index of names and places.

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