With the Allied invasion of Africa on, Ernie Pyle's fame back in the US as "the only reporter to bring the war home to us" begins to grow. In just six month's time his column is pick up by more than one hundred additional newspapers and his daily readership increases by nearly six and a half million people. He continues to write human interest pieces about the soldiers "over there," but he also includes his own first hand accounts of loss and of the feelings that soldiers experience. He isn't writing about bravado and heroics - though there are heroes in his columns to be sure, they are just also the everyday people who have had war thrust upon them and are trying to survive.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Episode 147: The Mayaguez Incident - The Last American Casualties in Vietnam, Part VII
In the years following the Mayaguez Incident, several memorials have popped up. As is was considered the final combat action of the Vietnam ...

-
After the 369th Infantry Regiment returned home from World War I, a terrible summer of racial violence spread across the South and into the ...
-
When the Harlem Hellfighters returned from the Great War the two most famous members of the acclaimed regiment were band leader First Lieu...
-
Joseph Beyrle was one of the enlisted in the US Army Paratroopers in 1942 after graduating high school and was sent to Camp Toccoa, Georg...
No comments:
Post a Comment