Remembering Our Precious WWII Heroes

Remembering Our Precious WWII Heroes

http://www.renewamerica.com/columns/miller/170921

By Gina Miller

It was a chance encounter at our neighbors’ annual summer party in which I was fortunate to meet Thomas E. Simmons. I learned that he’s the author of several books, including, “Forgotten Heroes of WWII, Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers, Second Edition.”  It’s a compilation of the stories of fifteen World War II veterans in the European and Pacific theaters, land, sea and air.

This is not a new book. It was first published in 2002, with the second edition out in 2014, and Mr. Simmons told me that all but a few of the men featured have since passed away. I cannot adequately express how deeply moved I was in reading this book and how strongly I recommend it. With each man’s story, I cried. It’s an excellent, though brutal, book, and one I wish every American would read, especially the young, who aren’t being properly taught our history anymore.

Like many, if not most, war veterans, these men didn’t want to talk about their horrific experiences, but as Mr. Simmons wrote in his prologue:

“At first, without exception, these men refused to talk about the war… All made similar statements: ‘There’s really not much to tell. I was just there like everyone else. All I wanted to do was get home.’ Each was uncomfortable at being singled out to speak of experiences he felt were common to so many others. Each professed, ‘It was so long ago I don’t remember much.’

“I was gently persistent, beginning with simple questions. In each case a strange thing happened. Speaking quietly, shyly, honestly, and often painfully, vivid experiences began to flood from bottled-up memories that had been locked away decades ago, locked away because they were painful and because those who were not there, including loved ones, could surely never understand. Once memory’s gate was opened, each man spoke with clear recall in remarkable detail.”

Each chapter is one man’s account, and one chapter is of two men on the same islands in the Pacific. One chapter features entries from the diary of a medic in Japan’s imperial army on Saipan. The entries are from the last few terrible and desperate weeks of his life as the Allied forces closed in, and as Mr. Simmons notes, they illustrate, “America faced a determined, fierce, and fanatical enemy on the islands of the Pacific.”

Mr. Simmons seamlessly interposes each man’s firsthand account with his own extensively researched narrative, which provides context and a great deal of educational and incidental information. While this is a history book, it’s unlike any history book I’ve read. In reading the personal stories these men recount, it’s as if we’re sitting in the living room with our father or grandfather listening as he transports us with vivid descriptions into the center of the awful action. Those of us who’ve not seen war cannot remotely comprehend the hell on earth these men and boys endured.

While the men featured in this book are mostly from areas on or near the Mississippi Gulf Coast, there are countless untold stories just like them from World War II veterans all across our nation. These are the tales of the common men and boys who were thrust into the last great and terrible war the United States and her allies entered and won with decisive force. The book is a precious reminder of the dreadfully dear cost of our freedom, freedom that far too many today don’t regard – or worse, aggressively work to stifle.

At the very least, we owe these men our remembrance, to learn their stories and thank God Almighty for the mercy He granted to our nation in giving us the victory in World War II. In his epilogue of “Forgotten Heroes of WWII, Personal Accounts of Ordinary Soldiers, Second Edition,” Mr. Simmons writes:

“Old men now, the surviving veterans of World War II are dying at a rate of more than three hundred thousand a year. Let us not forget what they did, how hard it was for them daily – the physical discomfort, fear, pain and mortal danger – and that they somehow found the strength and courage to prevail in the face of it all. Every American, regardless of age or station in life, and each generation that follows has an obligation, individually and collectively, to make certain that the leadership of America, however imperfect in this imperfect world, nonetheless maintains our nation’s strength, moral character, courage, and determination to remain a free republic founded upon individual liberty. We owe nothing less to that quietly departing generation as we ride the freedom they preserved for us into the twenty-first century.”

I urge you to order a copy of this book, and read it. Get gift copies for your friends and family. You’ll be glad you did.

Please join us for a Book Signing for QL4 by James Garrison      

Please join us for a Book Signing for QL 4 by James Garrison       

 

River Oaks Bookstore 3270 Westheimer (at River Oaks Blvd.) Houston, TX 77098 Thursday, September 28th, 5 pm to 7 pm.  Come chat with Jim, browse around and enjoy refreshments while you are there.  Feel free to invite your friends to join us.

QL 4 was just recently awarded a Silver Medal for Literary Fiction by the Military Writers Society of America (MWSA) For more on QL 4 go to:  https://jamesgarrison-author.com/ql4-3p/                                

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Permian Basin Writers’ Conference

Just got back from a most delightful and fruitful time at the Permian Basin Writers’ Conference. Fantastic writers, presenters, and exceptional hosts. I may be taking on a short story collection, two historical fictions, and a memoir. Outstanding writing!

Lights, Camera, Learn!

On the 4th Sunday of each month there is a year-long series of monthly seminars/workshops on the special magic of making movies. Contact Dr. Tom Parks tparks9@suddenlink.net

The Permain Basin Bookies will be hosing another manuscript contest in 2018. The contest will take place in the summer, and details can be found in the spring @ pbookies.com

Boom or Bust Writing Workshops and Book Clubs @ stief_s@utpb.edu

Lubbock Book Festival 2017 October 28, 2017 @ LHUCA 511 Ave. K, Lubbock, Texas www.facebook.com/lubbockbookfestival

Permian Basin Writers’ Workshop – Faith-based Writing, Sunday, September 17 — TOMORROW — 9-5 @ Midland College www.permianbasinwritersworkshop.org

Waterhouse to sign new book Saturday

https://www.westplainsdailyquill.net/features/arts_and_entertainment/article_eb0e92e4-9989-11e7-a03e-df33fb588e5b.html#.WbwSW4fvhys.hotmail

Lin Waterhouse, author of The Ghost of Timmy Wahl – Eternal Secrets at Hunter’s Mill, Bred to the Bone Deadly Secrets at Hunter’s Mill, and The West Plains Dance Hall Explosion, will be signing copies of her books from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, West Plains author @ Aid Downtown Antiques on Court Square 1 Court Square, West Plains, MO 65775 417-256-6487 http://www.dtantiques.com/

  

Rochelle Wisoff-Fields @ Inklings’ Book and Coffee Shop TOMORROW!

  

Rochelle Wisoff-Fields, author or Please Say Kaddish For Me, From Silt and Ashes, As One Must, One Can, and the upcoming coffee table companion book, A Stone for the Journey, will be signing all three novels and selling her art at Blue Springs Fall Fun Festival tomorrow, September 15, 2017 @ Inklings’ Books and Coffee Shop as author du jour from 12:00p – 7:00p. It is a treat to be able to get all her books and purchase her incredible artwork. Amazingly talented in so many ways! Inklings’ Books and Coffee Shop 1101 W Main St, Blue Springs, MO 64015 816-224-9082 https://www.inklingsbookscoffee.com/

         

Fantastic review for Don Quixote & Candide Seek Truth, Justice, and El Dorado in the Digital Age by Stefan Soto aka Stephen Doster

BOOK REVIEWS

Humor Book Recommendation

Time travel, spaceships, and a wizard with a grudge.

Did you know? Every time you make an Amazon purchase from one of my links, you’re supporting this site.

Don Quixote & Candide Seek Truth, Justice, and El Dorado in the Digital Age, by Stefan Soto (a.k.a. Stephen Doster) is a work of pure genius. Told entirely from Candide’s perspective, this book is full of wit and irony (a word whose meaning is debated several times by key characters). This is the perfect read for those well-versed in classic literature, but even those without that background will find this story entertaining.

Personally, I couldn’t stop myself from bursting out laughing at several scenes in the book. And the plot is well-crafted, too. I gasped several times as an unexpected twist unfolded or a new obstacle presented itself before our intrepid adventurers. (Okay, so maybe Candide wasn’t always all that intrepid.)

Part of what makes this novel magical is how deftly Soto/Doster weaves characters from other stories together.

In this re-imagining of literary history the two meet Cyrano De Bergerac, Merlin, Sherlock Holmes, the crew of the Starship Enterprise, Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn, Dean Moriarty , Elizabeth Darcy (née Bennett) Mr. Darcy and multitude of historical figures, and share unexpected encounters with people from their past.

~excerpt from official Amazon blurb

If you’re searching for a book with amazing characters, a stellar plot, and hilarious shenanigans, this is the book for you.

 

More by Stephen Doster

Goodreads: 10 Other Books