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Really good stuff. Wish I knew more about the journalists themselves, but still very good. The VietNam series I thought better primarily because I could relate to it better. Still good! Finished 10 June 2021.
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untraveller | 2 reseñas más. | Jul 2, 2021 |
war through the eyes of the reporters and photographers ...multiple short, readable, primary-source selections...amalgam of hard news dispatches, letters, and articles from writers as far-ranging as Ernie Pyle, Bill Mauldin, John Hersey, Edward R. Murrow, and Martha Gellhorn to John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway, and Gertrude Stein. Journalism and history students can track both the war and American attitudes through these narratives.
This Library of America volume (along with its companion) evokes an extraordinary period in American history—and in American journalism. Martha Gellhorn, Ernie Pyle, John Hersey, A.J. Liebling, Edward R. Murrow, Janet Flanner: in a time when public perceptions were shaped mainly by the written word, correspondents like these were often as influential as politicians and as celebrated as movie stars.

This second volume traces the final eighteen months of the war: the campaign in Italy and the Southwest Pacific, the Normandy invasion, the island battles from Saipan to Iwo Jima, the liberation of Paris, the Battle of the Bulge, the fall of Berlin, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Here are Ernie Pyle bearing witness to war in the infantrymen’s foxholes; A.J. Liebling on D-Day; Robert Sherrod and Tom Lea landing with Marines and registering the horrors of Pacific Island warfare; Martha Gellhorn and Edward R. Murrow indelibly reporting on the liberation of Dachau and Buchenwald. Here too are two great book-length works, included in full: Bill Mauldin’s Up Front, the classic evocation of war from the GI’s point of view, complete with his famous cartoons, and Hiroshima, John Hersey’s compassionate account of the first atomic bombing and its aftermath.

Writers who covered the home front are included as well: S.J. Perelman on the absurdities of wartime advertising, James Agee on the impact of wartime newsreels, E.B. White on the United Nations conference in San Francisco. Here too are writers on aspects of the war still often neglected: Vincent Tubbs and Bill Davidson on the combat role of African-American soldiers; Susan B. Anthony II on working in the Navy Yard; I.F. Stone protesting U.S. government inaction in the face of Nazi genocide.

This volume contains a detailed chronology of the war, historical maps, biographical profiles of the journalists, explanatory notes, a glossary of military terms, and an index. Also included are thirty-two pages of photographs of the correspondents, many from private collections and never seen before.
 
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MasseyLibrary | 2 reseñas más. | Mar 26, 2018 |
Excellent. I especially appreciated the entirety of Bill Mauldin's _Up Front_ and the long New Yorker piece on the Hiroshima survivors.
 
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kcshankd | 2 reseñas más. | Sep 7, 2016 |
Mostly excellent. There were a few selections that were more reporter-centric then I would have preferred, but then it is a book about reporting WW II.

Liebling, Pyle, and the Tarawa account stand out.
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kcshankd | 2 reseñas más. | Aug 30, 2016 |
One of the best anthologies to come out of WWII. This second volume begins with Ernie Pyle reporting from Italy in 1944 on how it feels to wait for an attack and ends with John Hersey on the bombing of Hiroshima. In between we have Homer Bigart on the signing of the formal surrender on board the USS Missouri: Brendan Gill's incomparable interview with a young bombardier home on leave after 25 missions over occupied Europe; Ernest Hemingway on his return to Paris and Martha Gellhorn on board the first hospital ship taking wounded off the coast of Normandy. Superb eye-witness reporting.
 
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seoulful | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 12, 2008 |
One of the best anthologies to come out of WWII. This volume begins with William Shirer's account of the Munich Conference in 1938 and ends with Walter Bernstein's report on the Italian campaign in 1944. In between we have Gertrude Stein, living in German occupied France; Martha Gellhorn in a RAF burn ward and dispatches from the famed Ernie Pyle. Superb eye-witness reporting.
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seoulful | 2 reseñas más. | Jan 12, 2008 |
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