Courageous, resilient, and extraordinarily selfless, the men and women who fight for our freedom are America’s greatest heroes. The following military memoirs span decades and document a variety of military campaigns, from the Screaming Eagles’ airborne actions on D-Day and American Special Forces operations in Vietnam, to present-day engagements in Afghanistan and Iraq. Throughout, readers witness the camaraderie and valor of soldiers in combat and the sacrifices they must make in times of war and peace.
Goodbye Vietnam
Texas native William Broyles Jr. was a 24-year-old student at Oxford University when he joined the US marines in 1968. Soon, he found himself commanding an infantry platoon near Da Nang. In this “exceptional and memorable” account (Gay Talese), Broyles returns to the battlefields of Vietnam to sit down with his former enemies of war: the Vietnamese generals and soldiers.
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Girl at Sea
Girl at Sea is the powerful autobiography of Joanna Sprtel Walters, a Surface Warfare Officer in the US Navy who broke through gender barriers as one of the first female officers to serve aboard a combatant warship. Walters served on the USS Paul F. Foster and the USS La Moure County during her Naval career, achieving the rank of lieutenant before her retirement. Her memoir charts her rise through the ranks and her battle to thrive in the man’s world of the US Navy.
Hal Moore
Veteran and military historian Mike Guardia delivers the ultimate biography of American hero Lt. Gen. Harold ("Hal") Moore. Moore stands as one of the most admired American combat leaders of the last 50 years for his service in the Korean War and the Vietnam War, and is the author of the critically acclaimed military memoir We Were Soldiers Once…and Young.
We Were Soldiers Once . . . and Young
In this New York Times bestseller, Lt. Gen. Hal Moore joins forces with journalist Joseph L. Galloway to chronicle in vivid detail the battle of Ia Drang in Vietnam. In November 1965, then-Lt. Col. Moore and the 450 soldiers under his command landed in the la Drang valley. They soon found themselves surrounded by some 2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers. As Moore’s vastly outnumbered men fought for survival and eventually drove back the North Vietnamese forces, a sister battalion due north suffered heavy casualties. Together, these clashes were the first major engagements between the US Army and the People’s Army of Vietnam—and set the stage for the years-long conflict to come.
Absolutely American
In Absolutely American, Rolling Stone journalist David Lipsky chronicles the daily life of cadets at the US Military Academy at West Point, New York. Beginning in 1998 and spanning four fateful years, Lipsky follows a colorful cast of future soldiers, detailing the joys, struggles, and sacrifice of life on the Long Gray Line.
In Formation
Lt. Col. Cheryl Dietrich is one of only a hundred female officers to have achieved the rank of colonel or higher in the US Air Force. In this first-hand account, Lt. Col. Dietrich chronicles her transformation from introverted recruit to a top military commander and key force in redesigning the structure of the Air Force within the Pentagon. Throughout, Lt. Col. Dietrich reveals the challenges she faced and the glass ceilings she broke as a woman rising through the ranks of the military.
We Few
Green Beret Nick Brokhausen served in Recon Team Habu, CCN on his second tour to Vietnam in 1970. The American Special Forces squad embarked on a number of perilous reconnaissance missions in the dense, enemy-controlled jungles of Laos and Cambodia. Joining them in the fight were the Montagnards, an oppressed mountain minority group of the Central Highlands of Vietnam trained by US forces and fully engaged in the war. In this gripping account, Brokhausen offers an insider’s look at his fight in Vietnam.
D-Day with the Screaming Eagles
George E. Koskimaki was a former paratrooper of the 101st Airborne Division (also known as the Screaming Eagles) who jumped into Normandy on June 6, 1944 as General Maxwell Taylor’s radioman. In this one-of-a-kind volume, Koskimaki collects captivating firsthand accounts of the D-Day invasion from the men who were there, from battery commanders and division command personnel, to surgeons, field medics, chaplains, and the rough and ready airborne troopers.
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Nightcap at Dawn
In this “truly extraordinary” collection (Christopher Hitchens), Sgt. J.B. Walker assembles candid emails written by US soldiers fighting in Iraq. The American soldiers behind these messages reflect on the merits and hardships of the counterinsurgency, vividly capturing Iraq’s war-torn city streets, the suffering of Iraqi civilians, and the shared struggles experienced by US forces.
Thunder Run
Thunder Run documents the 2003 surprise assault on Baghdad by the Second Brigade of the Third Infantry Division, an armored force comprised of three battalions and fewer than 1,000 men. Zucchino, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, captures the battle and the intense fighting experienced by the Second Brigade soldiers, who, after three days of combat, successfully captured Baghdad.
Unbreakable Bonds
This heartfelt collection, which includes forewords by President George H.W. Bush and former Maryland congresswoman Connie Morella, shares the inspiring stories of ten Silver Star Mothers who aided in the recovery of their wounded warrior sons and daughters at Walter Reed Hospital. Deeply touching, Unbreakable Bonds celebrates the steadfast courage of the soldiers in recovery, the selfless love of their mothers, and the network of caregivers who assist our servicemen and women.
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