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Guadalcanal Diary

Richard Tregaskis Mark Bowden

$35

Paperback

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English
Modern Library Inc
15 July 2000
One of the most important American works of World War II, this celebrated classic gives a soldier's-eye-view of the pivotal Guadalcanal battles-featuring an introduction by Mark Bowden and an afterword by Moana Tregaskis.

""The book's secret is the simple secret of all good reporting-fidelity and detail.""-Time

"" Guadalcanal Diary

is invaluable as an accurate, ground-level account of a turning point in history, as a superb example of war reporting at its best, and a lasting contribution to American literature.""-Mark Bowden, from the introduction

Unlike some of those on Guadalcanal in the fall of 1942, Richard Tregaskis volunteered to be there. An on-location news correspondent (at the time, one of only two on Guadalcanal), he lived alongside the soldiers- sleeping on the ground, only to be awoken by air raids; eating the sometimes meager rations; and braving some of the most dangerous battlefields of World War II. He more than once narrowly escaped the enemy's fire, and so we have this incisive and exciting inside account of the groundbreaking initial landing of U.S. troops on Guadalcanal.
By:  
Introduction by:  
Imprint:   Modern Library Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 201mm,  Width: 130mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   221g
ISBN:   9780679640233
ISBN 10:   0679640231
Series:   Modern Library War
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Richard Tregaskis was a writer and reporter. He received the Overseas Press Club's George Polk Award in 1964 for first-person reporting under hazardous circumstances. He died in 1973. Moana Tregaskis was a longtime journalist for The New York Times.

Reviews for Guadalcanal Diary

This is part of the February dual selection of the Book of the Month - which means plus sales through that publicity. It is also Random House candidate for the big reporter's story, to follow the current success, Sues to Singapore. Two points in its favor. I found it excellent blow-by-blow reportage, but not a book that lives on after I'd finished it. Vigorous writing, vivid and homely details of the daily round, punctuated by attack and threat of attack, humanized by the intimate picture of how they ate a?? slept - or didn't - and lived, what they talked about and thought about; the ups and downs of morale. Strangely enough, I got a recurrent sense of anticlimax, a feeling that the real battle was over the ridge, or around the point of land, or anywhere but where Tragaskis and the units to which he was attached, were dealing with snipers, detached contingents, but not the main forces. One feels - with the marines - keyed to major action - and it doesn't happen. Read for the feel and smell and atmosphere of the place; for the human interest bits, personal records of individual deeds, cued to home consumption by parenthetical identification of individual heroes with their home towns. You don't get much sense of overall pattern; it is a close-up, not a bread view of the action, and it covers only the weeks up to mid-September. (With a promised few pages to come summarizing subsequent happenings to Tregaskis himself.) As star reporter for King ??Features, he was given this chance to share the experiences - and the perils - of the front lines..... Watch for another reporter's story which dovetails with this for the subsequent weeks, - Ira Wolfert's Battle of the ??Solomons (Houghton). The two books should be sold as a unit - so mention the fact that the second is coming shortly, and keep the customer's name. (Kirkus Reviews)


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