The anti-warrior : a memoir / by Milt Felsen ; introduction by Albert E. Stone.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Singular lives: the Iowa series in North American autobiographyPublication details: Iowa City : University of Iowa Press, 1989.Edition: 1st editionDescription: xxv, 245 pages : black and white photographs ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 0877452415
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 940.54/81/73 19
LOC classification:
  • DP 269.9 .F36 1989
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction -- Chapter 1 | 1918-1930 -- Chapter 2 | 1930-1937 -- Chapter 3 | 1937 -- Chapter 4 | 1937 -- Chapter 5 | 1937 -- Chapter 6 | 1937-1938 -- Chapter 7 | 1938 -- Chapter 8 | 1938 -- Chapter 9 | 1939-1941 -- Chapter 10 | 1941 -- Chapter 11 | 1941-1942 -- Chapter 12 | 1942-1943 -- Chapter 13 | 1943-1944 -- Chapter 14 | 1944-1945 -- Chapter 15 | 1945.
Summary: In 1937 thirty-six nervous young men dressed in ill-fitting blue suits, wearing berets, and carrying identical black valises were given tickets for an American Export Lines ship. They were told to conduct themselves as ordinary tourists, to be "inconspicuous." They were volunteers for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, traveling the French underground to join in the fight against Franco. Among them was Milt Felsen, a young New Yorker and radical anti-war activist on the University of Iowa campus who had decided that Fascism had to be opposed. Some of these young men never made it to their destination. But Milt Felsen did, beginning a march across the Pyrenees which was only the first of his many battles and adventures. Told with uncommon wit and verve, this memoir of war and resistance is a stirring account of Felsen's involvement in two decades of battle. Surprisingly, this is a spirited and even funny book, infused with Felsen's unbeatable personality. After the Spanish Civil War, Felsen helped form the O.S.S. in World War II. Taken prisoner of war, he escaped in his inimitable style during a 1,200-mile prisoner-of-war march and drove out of Nazi Germany in a Mercedes-Benz. He returned to the United States more convinced than ever of war's insanity and its extreme human cost. Most of us are only spectators of the world's larger events. Milt Felsen knew the excitement and despair of being a participant. While most war books abound in details of what happened, this one also delves into why. Felsen's straightforward account is refreshingly frank and doesn't pretend to be more than it is- his own lived version of war and common truth." -- From the back of the book.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
BOOKS BOOKS Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks DP 269.9 .F36 1989 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan NPML21090012

Includes black and white photographs documenting the author's life.

Introduction -- Chapter 1 | 1918-1930 -- Chapter 2 | 1930-1937 -- Chapter 3 | 1937 -- Chapter 4 | 1937 -- Chapter 5 | 1937 -- Chapter 6 | 1937-1938 -- Chapter 7 | 1938 -- Chapter 8 | 1938 -- Chapter 9 | 1939-1941 -- Chapter 10 | 1941 -- Chapter 11 | 1941-1942 -- Chapter 12 | 1942-1943 -- Chapter 13 | 1943-1944 -- Chapter 14 | 1944-1945 -- Chapter 15 | 1945.

In 1937 thirty-six nervous young men dressed in ill-fitting blue suits, wearing berets, and carrying identical black valises were given tickets for an American Export Lines ship. They were told to conduct themselves as ordinary tourists, to be "inconspicuous." They were volunteers for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, traveling the French underground to join in the fight against Franco. Among them was Milt Felsen, a young New Yorker and radical anti-war activist on the University of Iowa campus who had decided that Fascism had to be opposed. Some of these young men never made it to their destination. But Milt Felsen did, beginning a march across the Pyrenees which was only the first of his many battles and adventures. Told with uncommon wit and verve, this memoir of war and resistance is a stirring account of Felsen's involvement in two decades of battle. Surprisingly, this is a spirited and even funny book, infused with Felsen's unbeatable personality. After the Spanish Civil War, Felsen helped form the O.S.S. in World War II. Taken prisoner of war, he escaped in his inimitable style during a 1,200-mile prisoner-of-war march and drove out of Nazi Germany in a Mercedes-Benz. He returned to the United States more convinced than ever of war's insanity and its extreme human cost. Most of us are only spectators of the world's larger events. Milt Felsen knew the excitement and despair of being a participant. While most war books abound in details of what happened, this one also delves into why. Felsen's straightforward account is refreshingly frank and doesn't pretend to be more than it is- his own lived version of war and common truth." -- From the back of the book.

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