Neighborhood Heroes

Life Lessons from Maine's Greatest Generation

By (author) Morgan Rielly

Paperback - £11.99

Publication date:

07 August 2014

Length of book:

180 pages

Publisher

Down East Books

ISBN-13: 9781608932634

Inspired by the old African proverb: "When an old man dies, a library burns to the ground," high-school student Morgan Rielly sought to preserve as many Maine libraries as he could by interviewing men and women from Maine who served in World War II and preserving their stories. All of these veterans taught him something, too, not just about how to fight a war, but how to live a life. They were never preachy, never full of themselves. Each of them knew they had participated in something great and special, but none of them thought that they, themselves, were great or special. There was Fred Collins, the sixteen-year-old Marine who used his Boy Scout training to clip a wounded soldier's chest together using safety pins from machine gun bandoliers while under withering fire on Iwo Jima. Or Inex Louise Roney, who served as a gunnery instructor for the Marines, hoping she could end the war sooner and bring her brother home. Or Harold Lewis, who held onto hope despite being shot down out of the sky, nearly free-falling to his death, and spending four months behind enemy lines in Italy. Or Jean Marc Desjardins, whose near-death experiences defusing German bombs with his buddy Puddinghead, taught Rielly the value of a good friend.
Neighborhood Heroes: Life Lessons From Maine's Greatest Generation is among the most impressive works of [the World War II and Vietnam War era veteran] genre that I have had the good fortune to read. . . .Each statement is well worth reading, for each says much about American attitudinal history.