HERO OF THE PACIFIC: The Life of Marine Legend John Basilone
James Brady
NEW copy. Hardcover with dust jacket. (Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, 2010). Photographs,
bibliography, index, 254 pages.
The Pacific island of Guadalcanal was a terrible place to fight a war. Although heaven for
mosquitoes, malaria, and infections of all kinds, it combined hellish equatorial temperatures
with heavy rains and dense jungle. Yet it was here that a shoeless, shirtless, mud-streaked
Marine gunnery sergeant known to his buddies as "Manila John" first displayed the courage,
tenacity, and devotion to duty that would define the remainder of his brief life and the
manner of his death two years later on another island, Iwo Jima.
In Hero of the Pacific, the late columnist, best selling author, and Marine James
Brady examines the life and death of a man who, though now all but forgotten, was one of
World War II's most celebrated figures. Medal of Honor winner John Basilone willingly and
repeatedly put himself in unthinkable danger to repel a prolonged and determined Japanese
attack, reluctantly became a national celebrity and a leading salesman in America's
"buy bonds" campaign, then begged his superiors to return him to active duty.
Brady provides a taut and thrilling account of Manila John's extraordinary heroism as more
than 3,000 crack Japanese troops stormed his machine-gun positions in a relentless
overnight battle in October 1942. He reveals Basilone in action, calmly repairing a jammed
machine gun, even as the enemy rushed at him; abandoning the relative safety of the foxhole
amid a hail of grenades and mortar shells to replenish diminishing ammo and water supplies;
fighting at close quarters with the few attackers who survived his team's withering fire; and
more.
If Manila John's sheer courage and stubborn refusal to succumb to exhaustion were on full
display at Guadalcanal, his tactical shrewdness and coolness under fire came to the fore on
Iwo Jima's Red Beach 2. Brady's account of Basilone's last few hours on earth is among the
most awe-inspiring tales of real-life heroism you will ever read.
This powerful biography includes revealing stories of Basilone's youth in the Rockwellian
any-town of Raritan, New Jersey, in the 1920s and 1930s; his first cross-country railroad
trip with fellow soldiers in 1935; and his decisions to leave the Army and, later, join the
Marines.
Brady explains the machine gunner's sly grin when legendary Marine commander Chesty
Puller threatened to charge him with desertion. He cuts through the amateurish and
exaggerated tales of earlier biographers to provide a gripping account of Manila John's
extraordinary heroism—the actions that led Puller, just a few days after the"desertion"
comment, to recommend Basilone for the Medal of Honor.
Complete with the definitive account of Basilone's death on the World War II island of
Iwo Jima, and the actions for which he was post humously awarded the Navy Cross,
Hero of the Pacific revives and honors the memory of one of the most unusual and
compelling figures of America's greatest war.
$25.00

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