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One of the few books on the "Police Action" I have read, but it was quite engrossing. I'm glad the man got through the war. it was the first of the wars that the USA got into after WWII, and the participants, especially the americans thought it was going to be the last phase of WWIi all over again. There are no big battles, but the writer has considerable insight, given the background he brought to the conflict.
 
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DinadansFriend | 2 reseñas más. | Oct 31, 2023 |
The Last Parallel by Martin Russ is a Marine's journal of his experience in the Korean War. Russ was an American military author, Marine, and associate professor at Carnegie-Mellon University. He was born in Newark in 1931, attended St. Lawrence University in Canton, N.Y., but dropped out in his junior year to join the Marines.

The journal opens with a description of Camp Pendleton. Although written thirty years before I joined the Marines, the areas of Camp Pendleton were still familiar to me. Although things change on Camp Pendleton, they change slowly. Twenty years after I left the Marines I could still recognize my old unit from the interstate. Perhaps this opening describing the base sets the scene for how little the Marine Corps, and for that matter, individual Marines change over time. If Russ didn't identify himself as a Marine his mannerisms and general attitude would give it away very quickly. There is that confidence in his voice and that Marine attitude about what the Marine Corps does wrong. It's not a condescending attitude but one of acceptance and just another day in the Corps.

Russ was trained as an armorer but wanted infantry. He did everything in his power to get attached to an infantry unit during the war and eventually succeeded. Russ does not seem overly patriotic or even overly gung-ho. He is much more the average Joe who wanted to experience combat. Unlike Vietnam veterans who have written about their experience. Russ does not develop a negative attitude towards the war or the government. He details his experience as well as the equipment used and the number of Marines and their individual weapons on patrols. There seems to be a bit of dry information in all the descriptions, but Russ blends it well into his story. Perhaps it's that I served as a Marine and his narrative seems almost conversational -- nothing seemed boring or dry.

The Last Parallel presents a side of war that is not usually seen in writing. There is no political or personal ax to grind nor is there the hatred of war. Russ is neither a glory seeker nor someone looking to make sergeant major. He writes an unbiased account of his experience and in a way that is very Marine-like. There is a bit of lighthearted swagger in his writing that keeps it interesting from beginning to end. A very well written account of an American at war.
 
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evil_cyclist | 2 reseñas más. | Mar 16, 2020 |
Superior military history: Lucid, spare, focused, free of rhetorical flourishes. Like the earlier reviewer, I was flummoxed by the appearance of Byron de la Beckwith, with no mention of his subsequent infamy (well-known by the time this book was published).
 
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sonofcarc | otra reseña | Aug 22, 2018 |
5289. Line of Departure: Tarawa, by Martin Russ (read 7 Jul 2015) Even though I read One Square Mile of Hell on 20 July 2007 when I saw this book I decided to read it. It tells well the story of the brutal battle in November 1943, which lasted only 76 hours but in which 1027 Marines and Navy corpsmen died, as did 4,690 Japanese. As a side note, there is an account of the exploits of a Marine corporal, Byron de la Beckwith, who went on to earn infamy on June 13, 1963, when he shot from ambush Medgar Evans. He in 1994 was convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in prison, dying 21Jan 2001. The Mississippi Supreme Court opinion affirming his conviction can be read at 707 So. 2nd 547. I put State v. Byron de la Beckwith into Google and was able to read the entire opinion and the dissent. The author does a workmanlike job in the book telling of the fierce battle which was Tarawa.
 
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Schmerguls | otra reseña | Jul 7, 2015 |
 
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clarkland | otra reseña | Jan 4, 2015 |
Great book! One of the best I have read on the Korean War. Greatly recommend it
 
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twelve43 | otra reseña | Jul 24, 2009 |
Russ's other book, Breakout, is a terrificly gripping history of the Choisin Reservoir campaign, and has been a favorite of mine for some time. So when I saw this title I purchased it at once.

It's completely different, but I'm not disappointed at all. Russ, who enlisted in the Marine Corps to fight in Korea, secretly kept a journal, and this is it. He's an excellent writer, conveying well the events as well as the moods of that strange war. I think his drawings, sketchs of the views from various sites, maps, etc. are among the most valuable parts of the factual narrative.

I would recommend this to anyone interested in military memoirs, or anyone interested in an honest look at life on the front lines. Surely many units in many wars suffered more than his - Ypres, or the Choisin, for example - but that does not detract from his tale or his service.
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salkin | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 4, 2006 |
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