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S'està carregant… Sergeant York and The Great Warde Tom Skeyhill
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This classic reprint of Corporal Alvin York's journal reveals him as a humble Christian who risked his life in the First World War and was later awarded the congessional Medal of Honor for his bravery. No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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This edition, an edited version of Sergeant Alvin York's 1930 autobiography, is aimed at young people. The books starts by depicting life in the hills of Tennessee. It is refreshing to read a book that is unaware of political correctness and tells the story with honesty. In describing a turkey shoot, York says, "We pay ten cents a shot and get the turkey if we bust its head."
After he give the reader an idea of what life is like in that part of Tennesee, York talks about his life and how he came to be a Christian and a pacifist. He then talks about the army training camps and then about the fighting in the trenches in France. The editor interrupts the narrative from time to time to add helpful details and accounts of the war that York does not give.
Of course, York spends a lot of time talking about his actions in the Argonne Forest which led to his being the most decorated soldier in World War One. Again he writes with refreshing honesty. He writes, "I told the major to blow his whistle or I would take his head off and theirs too. So he blowed his whistle and they all done surrendered. All except one. I made the major order him to surrender twice. But he wouldn't. And I had to tech him off. I hated to do it. I've been doing a tol'able lot of thinking about it since. He was probably a brave soldier boy. But I couldn't afford to take any chance, and so I let him have it."
This story is about another time and another war. And since it is not filtered through modern sensitivity, it leaves the reader with a picture of what life was like at that time. ( )