MY FATHER'S
WAR: A SON'S JOURNEY
Peter Richmond
Simon & Schuster, 1996.
NF/NF, First Edition. Remainder mark on bottom of book, on page
edges. 263 pp. "To the generation whose understanding of the military was
shaped by the Vietnam War--those who fought in it, as well as those who
did not or would not have--it is difficult even today to conceive of a
cause so righteous that they would be willing to risk their lives for it.
To the generation that fought WWII, such a sentiment is truly unthinkable.
They fought a war whose cause was just, vital to the future of the world.
They went off not unthinkingly, and not just dutifully, but willingly,
in service of something much larger than themselves. They were all heroic,
but it was a kind of everyday heroism that rejects so grandiose a label.
It was what you did, what you had to do, and who could choose otherwise?
Peter Richmond's father was one of those men who went off to war, and came
back, but always held a portion of himself and his experiences in reserve.
At least that was how it seemed to Peter in the few years he knew him;
Tom Richmond died in a domestic plane crash in 1960, when Peter was just
six. Tom Richmond was a highly decorated officer in the Marine Corps, winner
of the Silver Star for his actions on New Britain, one of the three islands
in the Pacific where he fought. The other two, Guadalcanal and Peleliu,
are legendary. Peter has now reached an age when he realizes he has been
a father to his own son for longer than he had a father himself. As a result,
he felt a longing to know more about who his father was and what he went
through. His memories are shaped by a photograph of his father, in uniform,
and of the souvenirs that he kept locked away in a trunk in the attic.
Peter understood that his father's time in the military was the most important
period of his life, and to understand him better he would have to learn
more about those experiences, which are so foreign to Americans just one
generation removed from that time. In MY FATHER'S WAR, Peter Richmond seeks
out the men who knew his father, who fought under him and commanded him,
who were wounded alongside him, and who risked their lives on his command.
He travels to the islands and battlegrounds where his father fought, walking
the trails and beaches that were so vital then and too little remembered
today. On Guadalcanal, he is there when the US Embassy is closed due to
budget cuts and the American flag comes down for the last time. On Peleliu,
scene of some of the bloodiest, most brutal, and most unnecessary fighting
in history, he is viewed with suspicion by those who depend on the marijuana-based
economy and who see any visiting American as a potential DEA agent. And
on New Britain, he shares the story of his father's exploits with young
villagers who know little of the island's history and are eager to hear
it and pass it on. It is Richmond's task~his own duty~to bear witness to
the courage of the men who sacrificd so much for their ideals and their
buddies, to hear and understand and describe both the heroism and the extraordinary
ordinariness of their actions. Part history, part memoir, part search for
identity and meaning, and part exploration of the nature of manhood, MY
FATHER'S WAR is a compelling, moving story that has great resonance both
for the men it describes and for their sons who can only now, as they have
become men themselves, appreciate the sacrifice and purpose represented
by their fathers' war."
$20.00

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