SHANE COMES HOME
Rinker Buck
VG/VG. Small remainder mark on bottom edge of book, otherwise in new condition. (NY: Harper Collins,
2005). 272 pp.
From Kirkus Reviews: An affecting portrait of the first American combat fatality in the Iraq
war, and of those who suffered his loss. As Hartford Courant staff writer Buck
(Flight of Passage, 1997) reports, Marine Lt. Shane Childers was "one of a
handful of grunts picked every year for promotion from the enlisted to
commissioned officer ranks," and for good reason: he excelled at everything he
turned his hand to, had grown from redneck to world traveler and would-be French
teacher, and was "the kind of soldier whom all the enlisted men and officers
boasted about and who was well known throughout the network of Marine bases
across the country." His legend, the reader is left to presume, will only
increase in the wake of his death. Shot down only a dozen hours after assuming
command of a rifle platoon while attempting to secure an Iraqi oil-pumping
station, Childers was an exemplary soldier; of that Buck leaves no doubt. But
there are other noteworthy soldiers in Buck's cast of characters, including the
young CACO, or Casualty Assistance Calls Officer, assigned to bring the news of
Childers's death to his family. Buck's leisurely developed account of the
rituals by which Marines attend to their fallen is very well done, though at
points not for the squeamish. Well done, too, are the character studies that
emerge as Buck relates the effects of Childers's death on his small community
and his many relatives. Childers's inconsolable Vietnam vet father and his
mother wrestle early on with the question of whether to inter him in Arlington
National Cemetery, "buried in the company of soldiers he practically knew," but
decide instead to return him to the Wyoming mountain country he loved; in each
step of reaching eachdecision, they emerge as people of great principle. So do
Childers's fellow Marines, and particularly that young captain, who questions
the war in Iraq but nonetheless lobbies hard to be sent to fight there, doing
the job he was trained to do. A fine and moving story, full of heroes.
~~~ Hardcover originally published at $25.95, now OUT OF PRINT.
$25.00

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