0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 1 of 1 matches in All Departments

South Pacific Diary, 1942-1943 (Hardcover, New): Mack Morriss South Pacific Diary, 1942-1943 (Hardcover, New)
Mack Morriss
R912 Discovery Miles 9 120 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

A unique chronicle of the war from the perspective of a sensitive twenty-four-year-old sergeant who wrote for the Army's in-house paper, Yank, the Army Weekly and a tale of the South Pacific that will not soon be forgotten. Correspondent Mack Morriss reluctantly left his diary in the Honolulu Yank office in July 1943. "Here is contained an account of the past eight and one-half months," he wrote in his last entry, "a period which I shall never forget." The next morning he was on a plane headed back to the South Pacific and the New Georgia battleground. Morriss was working out of the press camp at Spa, Belgium, in January 1945, when he learned that the diary he had kept in the South Pacific had arrived in a plain brown wrapper at the New York office. He was so happy "to know that this impossible thing had happened," he wrote to his wife, that he helped two friends "murder a quart of scotch." What was preserved and appears in print here for the first time is a unique chronicle of the war in the South Pacific from the perspective of a sensitive twenty-four-year-old sergeant who wrote for the Army's in-house paper, Yank, The Army Weekly. This is an intensely personal account, reporting the war from the ridge known as the Sea Horse on Guadalcanal, from the bars and dance halls of Auckland to a B-17 flying through the moonlit night to bomb Japanese installations on Bougainville. Morriss thought deeply and wrote movingly about everything connected with the war: the sordiness and heroism, the competence and ineptitude of leaders, the strange mixture of constant complaint and steady courage of ordinary GIs, friendships formed under combat stress, and, above all, what he perceived to be his own indecisiveness and weaknesses. Ronnie Day introduces Morriss's diary and illuminates the work with extensive notes based on private papers, government documents, travel in the Solomon Islands, and the recollections of men mentioned in the diary. Ronnie Day is professor and chair of the Department of History at East Tennessee State University. Mack Morriss, author of The Proving Ground, a novel based on his wartime experiences, died in 1975.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Pattern Mining with Evolutionary…
Sebastian Ventura, Jose Maria Luna Hardcover R3,298 Discovery Miles 32 980
Adaptive Resonance Theory in Social…
Lei Meng, Ah-Hwee Tan, … Hardcover R2,658 Discovery Miles 26 580
Social Big Data Analytics - Practices…
Bilal Abu-Salih, Pornpit Wongthongtham, … Hardcover R3,665 Discovery Miles 36 650
Urban Informatics Using Mobile Network…
Santi Phithakkitnukoon Hardcover R4,636 Discovery Miles 46 360
Analysis and Enumeration - Algorithms…
Andrea Marino Hardcover R3,059 R2,393 Discovery Miles 23 930
Linked Data in Linguistics…
Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Nordhoff, … Hardcover R1,419 Discovery Miles 14 190
Broad Learning Through Fusions - An…
Jia Wei Zhang, Philip S. Yu Hardcover R1,513 Discovery Miles 15 130
Advances in Data Science and Management…
Samarjeet Borah, Sambit Kumar Mishra, … Hardcover R6,625 Discovery Miles 66 250
Seriation in Combinatorial and…
Israel Cesar Lerman, Henri Leredde Hardcover R4,265 Discovery Miles 42 650
Temporal Data Mining via Unsupervised…
Yun Yang Paperback R1,173 Discovery Miles 11 730

 

Partners