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Band of Brothers : E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest by Stephen Ambrose

By Jelinas | Posted Under Book Reviews | Comments (13)



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Full disclosure: I watched the miniseries before I read the book. And maybe that’s a good thing, since I wasn’t picking at the miniseries, comparing it to the book.

As far as I could tell, the miniseries was a pretty faithful adaptation. But I digress. I come to discuss the book, not the miniseries.

The book follows a company of paratroopers through their experiences in Europe during World War II, from their basic training to their drop into Normandy on D-Day through the end of the war. The author follows a few of these men with particular care, and his telling of their personal war stories adds a human element to the historical accounts.

What makes Band of Brothers such a remarkable book is that the stories are true. Men really fought with this sort of bravery. They really endured these harsh, unbearable conditions. These men from all over the United States were largely ordinary, blue-collar men, but they fought with extraordinary courage.

Stephen Ambrose spent years gathering all of the information for this book. He got to know many of the men he wrote about, and heard these stories from their own lips. Despite receiving conflicting accounts regarding certain events (which he discloses), he writes about them as faithfully as he can.

Ambrose writes directly; his language isn’t too flowery, which is appropriate, considering the horror of war. He matter-of-factly describes the grim realities of war and, in doing so, echoes the matter-of-factness that many veterans show when they describe their experiences in the trenches. They don’t see that they’ve done anything particularly heroic. They simply fought hard because it was the right thing to do.

This book is a rare achievement. Kudos to Stephen Ambrose for capturing the remarkable story of Easy Company for generations of Americans to read, enjoy, and remember.

This review is part of the Cannonball Read series. For more of Jelinas’ reviews, check out her blog, Book Bloggy Blogg.









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Comments

Ambrose was a terrific writer. BoB is excellent, so is 'The Wild Blue,' about B-24 pilots flying over Europe and 'Citizen Soldiers,' an homage to the everyman who found himself a hero fighting the ground war.

Ambrose was often criticized by historians for writing "history lite," but as a History major, and as one who had to read a lot of exceedingly dull history books, I praise him for writing history books that normal people would actually want to read. Its a shame he's gone.

Posted by: EJ at June 25, 2010 9:35 AM

I've read 3 of Ambrose's books -- Band of Brothers, The Wild Blue and D-Day -- and in each instance, he managed to get at the heart of their stories.

I still think BoB is his best though. In a way, he does the opposite of so many historians and writers: rather the deify these men, he breaks them apart to reveal their true human nature. He doesn't shy away from their flaws or failings. And he makes it clear that the reward for such heroism is to come back home and try to build lives that had nothing to do with war.

Posted by: Fredo at June 25, 2010 11:34 AM

So it is like the series? Because that's awesome.

On a side note, I'd really like someone to read the books that The Pacific was based on and compare and contrast those bitches. I have a feeling they are way off. After doing research I've already found discrepancies between the actual fact and what the show portrayed. Note: I say other people should read the books because 99.9% of the time I can't stand non-fiction.

Posted by: DeistBrawler at June 25, 2010 12:20 PM

I've been on a pretty big WWII reading kick for the last few months, and I loved Band of Brothers and Citizen Soldiers (the only two Ambrose books I've read) immensely.

As far as The Pacific, I haven't seen the series yet but I did read With the Old Breed, which I think is one of the sources for the series. It's brutal (and damn good).

Posted by: Mattfactor at June 25, 2010 2:55 PM

Hey, Deist, I'll read them eventually and, hopefully, review them.

Just for you. ;)

Posted by: Jelinas at June 25, 2010 5:16 PM

I loved this book and highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys the genre.

Posted by: EricD at June 25, 2010 6:46 PM

Agreed.
Ambrose was a fantastic writer. He made history infinitely relatable.
i'm working my way through D-Day right now, which though not as personable, is also excellent.

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