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Fighter Squadron at Guadalcanal

door Max Brand

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Max Brand, one of America's most popular and prolific novelists and author of such enduring works as Destry Rides Again and the Doctor Kildare stories, died on the Italian front in 1944 without having published his one work of nonfiction. Now after more than fifty years and a string of fortunate coincidences, Brand's stirring account of the 212th Marine Fighter Squadron's operations at Guadalcanal in 1942 has been set in print. One of the very first examples of oral history, this treasure trove of personal and historical detail was the result of hundreds of hours of interviews with the pilots and ground crew of the 212th, as well as with Marine infantrymen and Navy personnel, conducted soon after the events took place. Stories of thrilling, yet deadly, air-to-air combat are recounted in the words of the men who were there - who also share their innermost thoughts about fear, courage, and their resolve to defeat the Japanese. Lost when Brand was killed while covering the Italian campaign for Harper's magazine, this unique and important find would never have appeared in print except for a meeting of squadron veterans and the author's daughter. Graced with the poetic spirit and descriptive power of his well-loved novels, Brand's account deserves a place among the classics of World War II literature for both its literary merit and its rich legacy of personal insights into one of the pivotal campaigns of the Pacific War.… (meer)
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Max Brand, one of America's most popular and prolific novelists and author of such enduring works as Destry Rides Again and the Doctor Kildare stories, died on the Italian front in 1944 without having published his one work of nonfiction. He conducted a series of interviews with returning pilots and ground crew of the 212th Marine Fighter Squadron following their return from the Battle of Guadalcanal in 1943. The manuscript was found 50 years later and brought into print. The account of the desperate days on Guadalcanal is told with an authentic immediacy. Pilots and ground crew alike were interviewed to give a good picture of the contribution of the 212th to this famous battle.
  MasseyLibrary | Oct 9, 2022 |
I'll be honest. I couldn't finish this book. I started it at least three times, but found it tedious and easy to put down each time, so I'm done. I bought FIGHTER SQUADRON AT GUADALCANAL because I enjoyed reading a few Max Brand westerns as a kid, and, since I generally enjoy books about war and the military, I thought I'd try this one. Brand wrote it from interviews he did with various squadron members during the war, but he put it aside when he got a chance to go overseas as a combat reporter, despite a bad heart. He was killed 'over there' in Italy. The unfinished manuscript languished for fifty years before it was finally published. And yes, I know Brand was a pen name for Frederick Schiller Faust. The book sounded like it would be a good one, but, to my mind, it was not, and Faust's family didn't do him any favors by dusting it off and publishing it. Sorry, Max. I would only recommend this book, and reluctantly at that, to avid WWII history buffs. (two and a half stars, with an admission that I couldn't finish it)

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, Booklover ( )
  TimBazzett | Sep 20, 2016 |
Max Brand, better known as a writer of popular Westerns and the Dr. Kildare series, conducted a series of interviews with returning pilots and ground crew of the 212th Marine Fighter Squadron following their return from the Battle of Guadalcanal in 1943. The manuscript was found 50 years later and brought into print. The account of the desperate days on Guadalcanal is told with an authentic immediacy. Pilots and ground crew alike were interviewed to give a good picture of the contribution of the 212th to this famous battle. ( )
  seoulful | Jun 25, 2007 |
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Max Brand, one of America's most popular and prolific novelists and author of such enduring works as Destry Rides Again and the Doctor Kildare stories, died on the Italian front in 1944 without having published his one work of nonfiction. Now after more than fifty years and a string of fortunate coincidences, Brand's stirring account of the 212th Marine Fighter Squadron's operations at Guadalcanal in 1942 has been set in print. One of the very first examples of oral history, this treasure trove of personal and historical detail was the result of hundreds of hours of interviews with the pilots and ground crew of the 212th, as well as with Marine infantrymen and Navy personnel, conducted soon after the events took place. Stories of thrilling, yet deadly, air-to-air combat are recounted in the words of the men who were there - who also share their innermost thoughts about fear, courage, and their resolve to defeat the Japanese. Lost when Brand was killed while covering the Italian campaign for Harper's magazine, this unique and important find would never have appeared in print except for a meeting of squadron veterans and the author's daughter. Graced with the poetic spirit and descriptive power of his well-loved novels, Brand's account deserves a place among the classics of World War II literature for both its literary merit and its rich legacy of personal insights into one of the pivotal campaigns of the Pacific War.

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