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Hardcover The Korean War: An Oral History Book

ISBN: 0151472882

ISBN13: 9780151472888

The Korean War: An Oral History

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Book Overview

This book brings to life one of the most bitter and inglorious conflicts in american history. Drawing on his interviews with hundreds of veterans of Korea, Knox masterfully weaves personal stories... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Tremendous

This is the first of two volumes of compelling history; I picked it up after finishing Fehrenbach's This Kind of War (also highly recommended) and it made a great companion read. The format allows for insightful observations by the men who lived the extraordinary months of June to December 1950, fighting a determined enemy who caught the U.S. and its allies flat footed and unprepared for combat in nearly every way. Fortunately, our warriors steeled themselves and, fighting over rugged terrain and in extreme weather , saved South Korea and proved our collective will to prevent communism's unchecked spread. The author skillfully weaves observations that illuminate both tactical and operational level actions and decisions, and he accurately portrays the human dimenson of men fighting for reasons that are both noble and fundamental, most notably, for each other. I greatly enjoyed this effort and highly recommend it along with the second volume, Uncertain Victory by Donald Knox and Alferd Coppel (Knox died unexpectedly halfway through this book); it covers a longer time range (1951 to 1953), but is equally compelling.

As Close As You'll Get

This is the best military oral history I've ever read, and it's as close as you will get to having been there. Although there are interviews and statements from all ranks, the concentration at the company level made this book especially compelling in giving a sense of the daily combat for those hundreds of nameless hills in korea. It gave a real feeling of life and death to the thousands of men who were wounded and killed. The interviews on the first month of the war on being overrun and then forming the Pusan perimeter are particularly vivid. For anyone who is reads military history this is a must read.

I cannot put the book down!

I became interested in the Korean War only after having joined the Army myself. My father fought in the war with the Army, but never talked about his role much, or what he went through. I bought Mr. Knox's book after glancing at it on the book store shelf. The first person accounts bring you right into the war. By allowing the participants to tell the story from the first-person the reader gets a 360 degree view of each battle. The book reads almost like fiction instead of history. I feel the adrenaline rush of battle, the exhaustion of victory and the frustration of grabbing that weapon for yet another 10 mile movement-to-contact without sleep. I feel the loss when one of the "characters" is taken away on a stretcher, knowing that I'll not be hearing from him again. I now have a slightly better understanding of what that dirty little "police action" was like. I don't think I'll be able to find many more books that can match the emotion of this.

Like being there.

I first met Frank Muetzel at my father's funeral. My father had been Muetzel's battalion executive officer. He recommended this book to me. I have read it many times since. I have read much military history -- am currently reading Ambrose's D-Day -- but nothing has come close to this book's ability to give the sense of being there -- the horror, the unremarked heroics, the irony, and the humor. It does far better than even recently released movies in putting one there.

Knox's Book Shows the Agony of War Through Many Eyes...

Knox, Donald The Korean War: Pusan to Chosin An Oral History The joys of doing book reviews of this sort, and the dogged research necessary to prepare them, is a path fraught with unexpected pain and pleasure. So it was with this book. I was looking in my local library (Amherst, Massachusetts) for this copy of Knox's book when I found, to my shock, chagrin and unbounded pleasure, that a sequel exists. The sequel will be reviewed in a few days. I was not aware such a sequel existed. I checked out the first copy of this book when I spent six months in Kunsan on assignment a few years ago. I have read Knox's first book no less than twenty times. A similar fate awaits the second...... In any case, Knox's Pusan to Chosin deserves close reading by all Korean War buffs. This book is not a first person account of one part of the war, which many narrative war histories consist of. Instead, it is a roving compilation of memories and narratives of the war by scores of soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen who fought in the wars's early months. Between early summer and Christmas, 1950, the front line between the combatants surged south to the dangerously vulnerable Pusan Perimeter, north to the Yalu, and finally back below the 38th parallel in the rout caused by Chinese intervention. The despair of the early retreats from Chonan, Pyongtaek, and Taejon stands in stark contrast to the brisk, confident advances after Inchon. Somehow Knox, while dancing around the Peninsula and across these broad tides of optimism and defeat, manages to produce not just a coherent story of the war, but a memorable one. He accomplishes this by allowing the men on the field to tell their story in parallel fashion. The reader sees the Inchon landings, the Pusan defenses, or the Chosin debacle through the eyes of dozens of infantry, officers, artillerymen, medics, or chaplains. In short, overlapping and interwoven narratives, the Korean War's earliest phases unfold briskly. Its almost like the author has the participants sitting around a table, years later, telling their stories to you directly. It is that gripping. Maps make the campaigns easy to follow. Highlights Include: -Captain Norman Allen's narratives about ITEM company north of the Naktong in central South Korea is excellent; with good sketches of the terrain (not just maps!), discussion of the uses and limits of artillery support, and the agonies that come from being a leader of men in war. -Marine Lieutenant Frank Meutzel chewing out a supply officer in order to make sure he gets a new pair of combat boots. In a country where lieutenants used photocopied maps from the Japanese occupation, supplies were hard to find. Meutzel made the supply officer understand climbing those hills in Korea did a job on the soul and the sole. -James Ransone's description of the tragedy suffered by task force Faith east of the Chosin reservoir. The Army brass does not make a good show for itself in these pages. Even given the c
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