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Through
the Wheat
by
BrigGen Edwin Simmons (USMC, ret) and Col Joseph Alexander (USMC,ret)
ISBN #
978-1-59114-791-6
Naval
Institute Press, 2008, $ 34.95
www.nip.org
Reviewed by
Andy Lubin
Recipient of
the 2008 MWSA Gold Medal for a book about the Marine Corps
More than
just a recitation of history, "Through the Wheat" is a
well-written and interesting book that describes how the
Marine Corps burst onto the international scene at Belleau
Wood and became known as one of the world's premier fighting
forces.
Veteran
authors (and veteran Marines ) Brig Gen Edwin Simmons and
Col Joseph Alexander have combined forces to give us a
history of the Marine Corps in World War 1. Prior to the
war, the Marines were a tiny expeditionary unit that was
used primarily to fight guerillas in Mindanao or Nicauragua;
its most public large battle was as active participants in
China's Boxer Rebellion of 1900. But as the United States's
entry into WW1 transformed the American military into a
cohesive instrument of national power, it also changed the
Marine Corps from a seaborne expeditionary unit into a major
fighting force that was capable of defeating the established
army of a western country.
But unlike
the Army, the Marine Corps values its small unit leaders,
and in telling their stories, authors Simmons and Alexander
excel.From young officers and future Marine commandants )
like 2ndLt Clifton Cates and 2nd Lt Lemuel Shephard, to the
old breed like (2x Medal of Honor recipient) GySgt Dan
Dailey and Col Albertus Catlin, Simmons and Alexander weave
a story of how the Marine Corps passed its traditions and
small unit expertise from one generation to the next.
"Through the Wheat" also presents the stories of a few of
those Marines killed while building these traditions; Yale
grad and world mile record-holder Lt Johnny Overton never
made it home, whilr LtCol Fritz Wise was never the same
mentally after his battalion suffered such horrific
casualties. Many old photos, all back & whites, serve to
personalize the Marines encompassing this slice of history.
"Through the
Wheat" chronicles the Marine fight in Belleau Wood against
German poison gas and machine guns where on a single sunny
June day, they suffered more dead than in thyeir previous
142 years of existence combined. In both the days
preceeding and following Belleau Wood, the Marines fought
and won at Lucy-le-bocage, Soissons, Blanc Mont, St Miheil
and the Meuse-Argonne.
"Come you
sons-of-bitches; do you want to live forever?" bellowed
GySgt Dailey when his men were hung up in the wheat at
Belleau Wood. While many of them did not, their tradition
and quiet heroism did, and "Through the Wheat" is their fine
story.
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