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Paperback Echoes from the Infantry Book

ISBN: 1492204641

ISBN13: 9781492204640

Echoes from the Infantry

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Echoes From The Infantry is the tale of one Long Island World War II veteran, the misery of combat, and the powerful emotional bonds that brought him home to Rockaway Beach and the love of his life.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Terricic Book!

A friend recommended this author's book and after reading the story I was thrilled that she did! "Echoes from the Infantry," by talented new writer, Frank Nappi, is a story that had me so emotionally involved, I had trouble putting it down once I began I began reading it. It is a thought-provoking tale of life, love and a war that lasted far longer than the actual war. I am more than happy to recommend this book to anyone who enjoys this genre. I know you will enjoy this story as much as I did!

Brady Bunch Killer -- This Is What A Real Family Looks Like!

I was lucky enough to hear this author speak at a conference recently. What a fortuitous encounter! His new novel is truly a gem, one that I will happily share with all of my students. "Echoes From The Infantry" shatters the facade that so many American families present and exposes some of the heartaches that plague all REAL families. James McCleary just wants to forget the horrors of his experience during World War II. His son John only wants to know his father. Although James truly desires to embrace his wife and son, he's trapped inside his own mind and haunted by the images of his fallen comrades. The death of John's mother pushes him closer to his father, but the memories still keep him at a distance. As John sifts through artifacts in the attic, he is able to gain a deeper understanding of his father's psyche and has a heartbreaking glimpse of the love that sustained him across the wasted expanse of wartime Europe. "Echoes of the Infantry" is a powerful and haunting look at the challenges of the American family and a true psycholigical study. Great book.

Insightful Tale of a WWII Infantryman

This is not just some simplistic WWII genre novel about war and battles; "Echoes From The Infantry" is a first class story of human relationships told by a writer who knows how to weave feelings, dialog and action successfully together! Author Frank Nappi takes the reader through the heart as well as the mind with his story. Father and son relationship issues surface as does the issue of PTSD (although not called that back in WWII). This book is so much more than a war novel, although there is plenty of action. The book explores the deeper recess of the characters and gives them real substance. They feel like real people facing the horrors of war and the problems of readjusting to family life in peace time. What makes this story even better, is the fact that the author crafted his storylines and even parts of some of his characters from real men that he knew. His experiences and eventual friendship with several WWII veterans gave birth to the idea of his book. He had invited these men over the years to his classroom to talk about their experiences to his students. The results of those class talks and visits inspired him to create a story loosely based on what they had gone through. This book is destined to become a war classic. The issues that Frank Nappi talks about are things that are still fresh issues with today's troops. The way he reminiscences and unfolds the story is pure gold. Nappi is destined to find great success writing; as his talents become very clear when you have the honest pleasure of reading through the pages of his book. The author honestly conveys the emotions and feelings of his characters with little effort. The energy of his tale flows emotionally though his book. It feels like you are taken on a journey of the heart, as well as an adventure. This book receives the Militray Writer's Soceity of America's TOP BOOK RATING - FIVE STARS! I believe that this book could even bring some healing and understanding for families as they discover insights which might make for better understanding of their veteran relatives!

NAPPI IS A RISING STAR IN THE LITERARY WORLD ...

Everyone knows at least one person who came back from the horror of war broken and bowed, and we see and hear about many more. Due to my empathetic nature, I can't read too many books or see too many movies about these walking wounded without getting depressed. With that in mind, I started to pass this one by. But then I read Grady Harp's heart-felt tribute to this book and took a second look at the author and the book description. Harp is one of my all-time heroes. I read his own book, War Songs, and it moved me to tears. His masterpiece is poetry in words and sculpture ... simplicity at its most tender. Harp, a young surgeon sent to tend the wounded was devastated by the horror all around him, so he wrote poems at night to ease the pain. Following the Vietnam War, he and his friend, Steven Freedman, "merged" the poems he had written with some expressive sculpture and during the creative process, they healed themselves ... and many veterans who read it. Since Harp truly understands veterans' needs--and his book helped so many veterans back on the road to mental health--I knew he wouldn't praise Nappi's book if it was "just another war story." Harp, sensitive and attuned to the sensitivities of others, praised Nappi for his "depth of feeling ..." in this most impressive 'first novel' ..." And because I value Harp's opinion and keen observations, I decided that Nappi's book was a "must" read for me, as well. The Bible advises that we should "love our neighbor as ourselves," and that's what I learned about Frank Nappi. He's a school teacher in Long Island who befriended World War II veterans and was deeply touched by their stories of heroism and suffering. From them, he learned that it was impossible to leave the battlefield behind--and even more impossible to explain it to their wives and children--so Nappi decided to explain it for them in this fictionalized version of one veteran ... who would be a representation of them all. And he pulled it off to perfection! He made his characters come alive in the high drama of real life. For a first novel, this has got to be the best ... the very best. Am I ever glad I didn't pass it by ... thinking it was just another war story that would break my heart. Instead, this book lifted me up because of the way Nappi managed to capture the real emotions of the vets towards their comrades-in-arms, and how hard they struggled to recapture their place in life following the war. Nappi chose one soldier through which to tell "everyone's" story and did a brilliant job of bringing him alive. He handled the task of acclimating the soldier and his family with finesse. This story tugged at my heart-strings until the end. And even afterwards, Nappi's fine prose tugged at my heart, refusing to let loose until I had examined my own conscience, feelings, and attitude about how I interact with all the war "heroes" I run into in my busy, everyday life. Nappi is a rising star in the literary world, and

'I am the enemy you killed, my friend...let us sleep now'

These words by poet Wilfred Owen from his body of work concerning World War I are an appropriate summation of the depth of feeling contained in pages of this most impressive 'first novel' by Frank Nappi. It is not often that first novels are rated with five stars: the higher ratings are usually reserved for the great works of literature by solid practitioners of the art of writing. But Nappi has created a finely wrought study/story of the effects of war not only on those who survive their time on the battlefields, but also on the families to whom they return. This is a simply told, wisely crafted, eloquently written novel that gives notice that there is a major new talent rising in the ranks of notable artists. World War II. James McCleary departs Rockaway Beach, NY, as the eldest sons of innumerable families did, to fight in the European Theater of France and Germany. Beginning as a robust fellow he bonds with fellow soldiers, survives treacherous battles and encounters with the enemy, witnesses all the horrors of war's filthy greed, and ends up in a German POW camp, ultimately returning home with the liberation of the camps by the defeat of Hitler and with the end of the war. James returns to marry Madeline the sweetheart of his pre-war days and sires three sons. But James is a changed, distant man from the lad Madeline first met. He is unable to retain jobs, is emotionally abusive to both his wife and sons, and lives in a silent world of a mind critically damaged by war. There is one particular secret that serves as a festering wound, preventing him from returning to normalcy after the war's end and it is that secret ultimately revealed that helps alter his approach to the future. Nappi very wisely weaves the present with the past in his manner of relating James' trauma: chapters alternate from the present to the past and back. The novel opens with his three adult sons returning home for the funeral of their mother and it is this time of vulnerability that acts as the stage for the confrontation of James' most damaged son John to finally uncover the mysteries of why his father gave him so little during youth. Cleaning the attic to sell the now defunct family home results in John's uncovering letters and messages long hidden that allow him to understand the irreversible emotional damage his father suffered: these letters reveal a tender John writing romantic missives to his beloved Madeline as well as a note from a German soldier that offers John forgiveness for the deadly burden that has encased John's life since the war. It is a time of reconciliation between father and son but more importantly it is a moment of revelation about how devastating war continues to be long after the truce is waved. Nappi recreates both the WW II atmosphere and the hometown angst as well as many of our finest writers. He writes descriptions of the cruelest acts of war in such a straightforward manner that he avoids the grotesque and the maudlin th
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