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Titre : | Joker One: A Marine Platoon's Story of Courage, Leadership, and Brotherhood |
Auteurs : | Donovan Campbell |
Type de document : | document électronique |
Editeur : | [S.l.] : Random House of Canada, 2009 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-1-4000-6773-2 |
Index. décimale : | 956.7 (Irak) |
Résumé : |
From Publishers WeeklyStarred Review. Campbell decided as a junior at Princeton that attending Marine Corps Officer Candidate School would look good on his r├®sum├®. Three years later, in the spring of 2004, he was in Iraq commanding a platoon known by its radio call sign, Joker One. Campbell tells its story, and his, in an outstanding narrative of the Iraq War. Joker One counted around 40 dudes: country boys and smalltown jocks; a few Hispanics and a single black. Some were college men with futures; some had pasts they preferred to forget. The battalion was assigned to one of Iraq's worst hot spots: the city of Ramadi, where faceless enemies found shelter among 350,000 Iraqi civilians. Joker One fought from street to street, house to house and ambush to ambush for seven straight months. By the end of the tour, even the Gunny's hands had started ceaselessly shaking, Campbell writes. Faced with urgent life-and-death decisions, Campbell had learned that there are no great options... you live with the results and shut up about the whole thing. For all his constant self-questioning, Lt. Campbell brought Joker One home with only one KIAÔÇöa record as impressive as his account. (Mar. 17) FromCritics praised Campbell as a gifted and deft writer who retells his Iraq tour in ÔÇ£powerful, exacting detailÔÇØ (Dallas Morning News). While Campbell avoids much analysis of the war overall, or even his platoonÔÇÖs specific mission, most critics found this to be a virtue. As the New York Times noted, Campbell ÔÇ£never quite puts his finger on the meaning, if any, of the extraordinary violence,ÔÇØ but he does ÔÇ£[lay] it all out for anyone else who wants to have a try.ÔÇØ Only the Denver Post found CampbellÔÇÖs unreflective style trying, citing that the author ÔÇ£seems awkwardly obtuse when it comes to ascertaining the needs of other people.ÔÇØ Most reviewers, however, admired the bookÔÇÖs honest day-to-day look at attempting to quell the Iraqi insurgency. |