CHECK IT OUT
Between the barbecues, camp-outs and outdoor fun, it’s easy to forget
why we will observe Monday as a national holiday.
“Memorial Day is a day when Americans remember the men and women in
the military who died for their country,” writes children’s author Amy
Margaret in “Memorial Day.” Along with a history of the observance, the
newest addition to her “Library of Holidays” series includes information
about symbols and traditions, military landmarks and Web sites for
further research.
For more sophisticated audiences, many new volumes document the
conflicts that have taken the lives of those we honor. The bloodiest
battle of the Civil War is the focus of “American Heritage History of
the Battle of Gettysburg.’ In this lavishly illustrated chronicle, Craig
Symonds has amassed letters, diaries and memoirs that humanize the blue
and gray. Nearly 300 photographs, paintings and illustrations combine
with firsthand accounts to give a vivid picture of what happened over
three days in July 1863.
From acclaimed military historian John Keegan, “An Illustrated History
of The First World War” features an equally astonishing collection of
photos, maps, posters, ads, paintings and postcards that illustrate the
tragedy of the first globally significant armed discord. A compelling
narrative supports almost 500 images that record the horrors of war.
While many books portray the gritty side of combat, former World War
II medic Leo Litwak adds a personal dimension gleaned from being a
recruit whose mission was saving lives, not taking them. In “The Medic,”
he offers a disturbing account of his overseas experiences of service
with bandages and gauze rather than rifles. It reveals warfare at its
most elementary level.
Long after they returned from the trenches, Vietnam veterans had an
array of conflicts to endure. To tell their story, Gerald Nicosia spent a
decade interviewing more than 600 people who took part in the war, who
later became active in the antiwar movement or worked as veterans’
advocates. In “Home to War: A History of the Vietnam Veterans’ Movement,”
he presents a chronicle of famous and unknown heroes who battled the
aftereffects of Agent Orange, post-traumatic stress disorder and the
Veterans’ Administration, and were ultimately successful in founding the
Vietnam Veterans against the War.
One of history’s most ironic holiday stories took place in December
1914, when thousands of cold, muddy soldiers defied their orders, put
down their arms and tacitly agreed to stop the killing during World War
I. Popular historian Weintraub catalogs the remarkable Christmas truce in
“Silent Night,” showing that there is, indeed, a human side to war that
is the real reason we celebrate Memorial Day.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Claudia Peterman. All titles may be reserved from home or office
computers by accessing the catalog at www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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