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If the Marines are "the few, the proud," Recon Marines are the
fewest and the proudest. Nathaniel Fick's career begins with a
hellish summer at Quantico, after his junior year at Dartmouth. He
leads a platoon in Afghanistan just after 9/11 and advances to the
pinnacle--Recon-- two years later, on the eve of war with Iraq. His
vast skill set puts him in front of the front lines, leading
twenty-two Marines into the deadliest conflict since Vietnam. He
vows to bring all his men home safely, and to do so he'll need more
than his top-flight education. Fick unveils the process that makes
Marine officers such legendary leaders and shares his hard-won
insights into the differences between military ideals and military
practice, which can mock those ideals.
The most eloquent and personal story of a young man at war since Geoffrey Wellum's FIRST LIGHT Until a winter evening in 1998 Nathaniel was just another history student on a comfortable career trajectory of high school to college to white collar job. Then he went to a lecture by a Wall Street Journal reporter who had just published a book on the US Marines. It brought forth a latent desire to break free of the 'seat belt and safety goggle, safety-first' culture: to be a warrior. He passed the gruelling selection course and joined the Marine Corps on graduation. Posted to a Marine Regiment in the wake of 9/11, he took part in the invasion of Afghanistan, then led a platoon of their elite Recon Battalion during the invasion of Iraq. This is not a book about the Iraq invasion as such: it is an articulate and deeply thoughtful young man's account of what it means to fight in the frontline, to risk not just death or injury, but psychological harm. He reveals some of the awful dilemmas war can bring, horrible problems to which there is no 'right' answer, but a decision had to be made quickly -- by him alone. In combat you are just one bullet away from death -- or promotion. But this doesn't focus the mind: it makes it freeze up -- unless your training is so thorough that you overcome exhaustion and terror. 'Nate' took 65 men to war and came home with all 65. He proved himself an excellent officer and won promotion, but resigned in 2003 to write this book and attend Harvard Business School.
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