For Sergeant David Griffin, a
"peace-time" Marine, Beirut was the chance to prove himself capable to the
generation of Marines who had been blooded in the Vietnam War. For Corporal
Steven Downs, Beirut was a struggle to separate the civilian from the soldier,
his distrust of the politicians' decisions from the military mission. For all of
the Marines serving in Lebanon, it was another war in a foreign country where
the enemy could be anywhere or anyone. Faced with Griffin's court-martial for
engaging the enemy against orders, these two young men find themselves
questioning their faith in themselves, their commanders, and eventually that
which above all else they must have faith in, the Corps.
A Marine Corps veteran himself,
author C. X. Moreau tells a chilling tale in Distant Valor, a tense and
realistic story of the Marines' brutal battles in war-torn Lebanon in the early
1980s. Kirkus Reviews called Distant Valor "a haunting slice of
military life that unsparingly catalogues the risks, rewards, pain, and joys of
casting one's lot with warriors."
Strife-torn Lebanon in the
early '80s, during the period when the Marines were there on a calamitous
peacekeeping mission, is the setting for a bleakly affecting (if occasionally
talky) debut from a former NCO who served in this lovely, treacherous land.
David Griffin, a sergeant in an infantry unit living in the trenches ringing
Beirut's seaside airport, has been in the USMC almost eight years without a
chance to prove himself in combat. Frustrated by the ambiguities of a conflict
in which he and his squad (bound by stringent rules of engagement) must exercise
restraint while drawing fire from all sides, the career Marine is constantly
torn between his fidelity to the Corps and an urge to fight back. Detailed to
help in a rescue effort at the American Embassy, which has been bombed by local
agents of an elusive Syrian Army officer, Griffin continues to chafe against the
restrictions. In the hills outside the shell-shocked city, where he's been sent
to escort forward observers back to US lines, Griffin deliberately provokes an
arrogant militia chieftain and decimates his opponent's troops in the ensuing
engagement. Back in camp, a vengeful first sergeant convinces Griffin's
superiors to conduct an inquiry into the unauthorized encounter. Meantime, the
Syrian officer targets the building used by the Marines as a barracks and
office. On his orders, an explosives-laden truck levels the lightly defended
complex. Almost 300 Marines die, and Downs wreaks violent vengeance upon a squad
of snipers trying to take advantage of the confusion. At the close, a dozen
years later, Downs (now married to the girl he left behind, and the father of
two young children) is slowly reconciling himself tothe losses of his youth.
A haunting slice of military life that unsparingly catalogues the risks,
rewards, pain, and joys of casting one's lot with warriors.
HARDCOVER OUT OF PRINT.