David Kenyon Webster

David Kenyon Webster’s Followers (22)

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David Kenyon Webster


Born
in New York, NY, The United States
June 02, 1922

Died
September 09, 1961

Website


Born June 2, 1922 in New York, New York
1937-1940, Attended the Taft School, Watertown, Connecticut
1940-1942, Attended Harvard College, Cambridge, Massachusetts
1942-1945, Rifleman, 101st Airborne Division
1945-1961, Journalist (reporter with Wall Street Journal, L.A. Daily News), writer, public relations (North American Aviation, Systems Development Corporation, Pacific Ocean Park), sales
Interests: Writing, surfing, skin diving, sailing, social justice
September 9, 1961, lost at sea while shark fishing off the coast of Santa Monica, California, leaving a wife and three children

Average rating: 4.13 · 3,279 ratings · 183 reviews · 3 distinct worksSimilar authors
Parachute Infantry: An Amer...

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4.13 avg rating — 3,218 ratings — published 1994 — 2 editions
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Myth and maneater: The stor...

4.12 avg rating — 34 ratings13 editions
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The War : Stories of Life a...

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3.79 avg rating — 34 ratings — published 1999 — 10 editions
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Quotes by David Kenyon Webster  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Was there any meaning to life or to war, that two men should sit together and jump within seconds of each other and yet never meet on the ground below?”
David Kenyon Webster, Parachute Infantry: An American Paratrooper's Memoir of D-Day and the Fall of the Third Reich
tags: death, war

“Those things which are precious are saved only by sacrifice.”
David Kenyon Webster, Parachute Infantry: An American Paratrooper's Memoir of D-Day and the Fall of the Third Reich

“Twelve years ago, when I was 10, I played at being a soldier. I walked up the brook behind our house in Bronxville to a junglelike, overgrown field and dug trenches down to water level with my friends. Then, pretending that we were doughboys in France, we assaulted one another with clods of clay and long, dry reeds. We went to the village hall and studied the rust rifles and machine guns that the Legion post had brought home from the First World War and imagined ourselves using them to fight Germans.
But we never seriously thought that we would ever have to do it. The stories we heard later; the Depression veterans with their apple stands on sleety New York street corners; the horrible photographs of dead bodies and mutilated survivors; “Johnny Got His Gun” and the shrill college cries of the Veterans of Future Wars drove the small-boy craving for war so far from our minds that when it finally happened, it seemed absolutely unbelievable. If someone had told a small boy hurling mud balls that he would be throwing hand grenades twelve years later, he would probably have been laughed at. I have always been glad that I could not look into the future.”
David Kenyon Webster, Parachute Infantry: An American Paratrooper's Memoir of D-Day and the Fall of the Third Reich

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