Men Without Hate
For this military historian Gene Lee’s epic is riveting and true to life — whether he is describing what Confederate soldiers saw, said, and did in the minutes before Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg in 1863, or what it was like to be in a US Army artillery unit in the Philippines in 1944. With scenes as vivid as those in a Michael Shaara Civil War novel, or one of the great World War II novels about the Pacific — think Thin Red Line-- Lee seizes and holds the reader’s attention as he guides his story through American history. He compels us to reflect about life motives like family, racism, and the aftereffects of war. — Nick Reynolds, NYT Bestselling Author of Writer, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Ernest Hemingway’s Secret Adventures 1935-1961.
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