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Manchester William - Goodbye, Darkness: A Memoir of the Pacific War

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Manchester William Goodbye, Darkness: A Memoir of the Pacific War

Goodbye, Darkness: A Memoir of the Pacific War: summary, description and annotation

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Blood that never dried -- The wind-grieved ghost -- From the Argonne to Pearl Harbor -- Arizona, I remember you -- Ghastly remnants of its last gaunt garrison -- The rim of darkness -- The raggedy ass marines -- The canal -- Les braves gens -- We are living very fast -- I will lay me down for to bleed a while ... -- ... Then Ill rise and fight with you again.;A personal memoir of the author while serving in the Pacific during World War II as a foot soldier in the Marines.

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COPYRIGHT 1979 1980 BY WILLIAM MANCHESTER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED EXCEPT AS - photo 1

COPYRIGHT 1979, 1980 BY WILLIAM MANCHESTER

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. EXCEPT AS PERMITTED UNDER THE U.S. COPYRIGHT ACT OF 1976, NO PART OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE REPRODUCED, DISTRIBUTED, OR TRANSMITTED IN ANY FORM OR BY ANY MEANS, OR STORED IN A DATABASE OR RETRIEVAL SYSTEM, WITHOUT THE PRIOR WRITTEN PERMISSION OF THE PUBLISHER.

BACK BAY BOOKS / LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY

HACHETTE BOOK GROUP

237 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY 10017

VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WWW.HACHETTEBOOKGROUP.COM

First eBook Edition: April 2002

Lines from We'll Build a Bungalow by Betty Bryant Mayhams and Norris the Troubadour, copyright Robert Mellin Music Publishing Corp. Used by permission.

Lines from On the Sunny Side of the Street by Dorothy Fields and Jimmy McHugh, copyright 1930 by Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc., copyright renewed 1957 and assigned to Shapiro, Bernstein&Co., Inc. Used by permission.

Photographs on pages 2, 8, 14, 158, 214, 348, and 392, U.S. Marine Corps photos; page 118, Mark Kauffman, copyright 1951 by Time Inc.; page 36, U.S. Navy photo; page 54, United Press International; page 76, J. R. Eyerman, 1980 by Time Inc.; page 190, Bruce Adams; page 254, 7th AAF; page 304, U.S. Army photo; page 323, Robin Moyer; page 394, 1980 by George Silk. All other photographs are courtesy of William Manchester.

ISBN: 978-0-316-05463-8

Acclaim for William Manchester's

GOODBYE, DARKNESS

A MEMOIR OF THE PACIFIC WAR

Never have the fighting men been better caught in their talk, fear, pride, misery, pain, anguish. Never have the savagery, madness, ferocity, violence, guts, crud, gristle, and gore of war been better put down on paper. Goodbye, Darkness belongs with the best war memoirs ever written.

Los Angeles Times

A storyteller of uncommon gifts and imagination. The reviewer is hard put to describe this intelligent, beautifully crafted but complicated work in a nutshell.

Clay Blair, Chicago Tribune

Unforgettable. A deeply felt attempt to exorcise ghosts and reclaim the integrity of the spirit. A page-turner that is raunchy and moving by turns and very well written.

Publishers Weekly

A very moving account. Manchester's war wasn't subtle. His memoir is powerful, painful.

People

Masterful.

Seattle Times

Weaving recollection with research, Manchester lets the war unfold like memory itself, in concentric circles rising from the subjective sensations to historic events. The sensations dominate, especially those of terror, loss, revulsion, remorse, and, beneath them all, love, the unchosen love shared by fighting men amid the horror and sacrifice of honorable war.

J.S. Allen, Saturday Review

An extremely personal memoir of World War II that will appeal to persons with traditional values and with which many veterans will be able to identify. It should also be interesting to young people seeking to understand the patriotic fervor that once was not only accepted but expected from Americans of all ages. Manchester neither preaches nor apologizes as he presents a graphic picture of the war and of the young men who fought and died.

James Simon, Library Journal

A compelling account of the war in the Pacific: its strategy, geography, tactics, fighting, its leaders. No one has looked it over from so many merging or intersecting perspectives. The campaigns for Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Saipan and Tinian, Guam, Peleliu, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa gory, in no way understated, movingly rendered and authentic.

Washington Post Book World

This is the most moving memoir of combat in World War II that I have read. Manchester has done for that greatest of conflicts what the English poet Siegfried Sassoon did for the First World War; brought home the misery and horror of combat and what it is like to fight and be wounded and die in hell and confusion and blood of modern battle. It is a testimony to the fortitude of man. This is quite different from the other books that Manchester has written. It is very personal: a quest to find what he has lost as a youth during the fighting in the Pacific and to come to terms with that young man who slogged it out as a foot soldier in the Marines. It is a gripping, haunting book.

William L. Shirer

Books by William Manchester

BIOGRAPHY

American Caesar: Douglas MacArthur, 18801964

Disturber of the Peace: The Life of H. L. Mencken

The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill; Visions of Glory:

18741932

The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill; Alone: 19321940

One Brief Shining Moment: Remembering Kennedy

Portrait of a President: John F. Kennedy in Profile

A Rockefeller Family Portrait: From John D. to Nelson

HISTORY

The Arms of Krupp, 15871968

The Death of a President: November 20-November 25, 1963

The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative History of America, 19321972

A World Lit Only by Fire. The Medieval Mind and the

Renaissance: Portrait of An Age

ESSAYS

Controversy: And Other Essays in Journalism, 19501975

In Our Time: The World as Seen by Magnum Photographers

FICTION

The City of Anger

The Long Gainer

Shadow of the Monsoon

DIVERSION

Beard the Lion

MEMOIRS

Goodbye, Darkness: A Memoir of the Pacific War

The author in 1945 To Robert E Manchester Brother and Brother Marine - photo 2

The author in 1945

To Robert E. Manchester Brother and Brother Marine

Your old men shall dream dreams your young men shall see visions Joel 228 - photo 3

Your old men shall dream dreams,

your young men shall see visions.

Joel 2:28

War, which was cruel and glorious,

Has become cruel and sordid.

Winston Churchill

But we shall be remembered:

We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;

For he to-day that sheds his blood with me

Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,

This day shall gentle his condition.

Henry V, Act IV, Scene iii

The author, 1945frontispiece
Lance Corporal William Manchester, Sr.17
Malinta Tunnel, Corregidor66
Red Beach, Guadalcanal172
The Ilu, Guadalcanal185
Bloody Ridge, Guadalcanal190
Sergeant Major Vouza204
Wading ashore at Tarawa226
The pier at Tarawa226
Enemy guns at Tarawa227
Suicide Cliff, Saipan272
Banzai Cliff, Saipan272
Japanese tank, Guam299
Cave with gun emplacement, Guam299
Bloody Nose Ridge, Peleliu312
American tank, Peleliu319
Japanese gun, Peleliu321
American monument, Peleliu323
Japanese monument, Peleliu323
Where MacArthur came ashore, Leyte330
Filipino monument to MacArthur, Leyte330
Makati cemetery, Manila336
Iwo Jima345
The view from Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima345
Sugar Loaf Hill, Okinawa, then and now
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