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The Long and the Short and the Tall: Marines in Combat on Guam and Iwo Jima

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In May, 1944, the author was a U.S. Marine sergeant and war correspondent with the 3rd Marine Division, leaving Guadalcanal for Guam. This narrative of the ensuing months follows Josephy through the the Guamanian jungle, and on into the teeth of one of the bloodiest assaults in all warfare -- Iwo Jima. This is a supremely vivid and spellbinding account of one of the most famous chapters in military history.

221 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1979

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About the author

Alvin M. Josephy Jr.

99 books17 followers
An American historian who specialized in Native American topics. He served as a combat correspondent during World War II and was awarded the Bronze Star for his coverage of the U.S. capture of Guam. His interest in Native American history started during an assignment from Time Magazine.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Jon Hall.
142 reviews1 follower
April 18, 2025
I have nothing but admiration for anybody who went through Hell like this. And to be a social commentator foremost as well.
Hats off to the author. Thank you for your service.
Profile Image for Urey Patrick.
342 reviews19 followers
March 4, 2013
Published in 1946, the author relates his year of combat with the 3rd Marine Division invading Guam in late 1944 and then Iwo Jima in 1945. It is a starkly gripping and personalized account of almost inconceivable physical hardship and sacrifice, constant danger, and the sudden visitations of death and injury upon Marines serving with him - events that are always surprising in their violence, and their total randomness. The author's orientation is necessarily limited to the viewpoint of the Marine rifleman. There is minimal wider perspective - understandably. This is an excellent, albeit short, immersion in the combat experience of the men fighting the Japanese from island to island in the Pacific - a different war than that in Europe forcing different demands upon its participants, and an extraordinarily different manifestation of the physical and emotional ordeals imposed upon them. This book is a worthy precursor to modern combat narratives such as Sebastian Junger's "War" and Jake Tapper's "The Outpost". If you like those books, you will not be able to put this one down once you start it! The combat experience of the Marine rifleman and the Army infantryman are little changed from 1944 to the present day - different only in the geography and the enemy and to a degree, the weaponry. The bitter, miserable and unforgiving nature of combat does not change.
925 reviews25 followers
November 18, 2008
This was a first hand account off the battle of Guam and Iwo Jima by a journalist in the army who reported back to the US on how the battle and invasion were going. It is from the 40's right after the war.

I picked it up for $4 at a used book store and it was a pretty good read. It had language and a tone that was set against the enemy in Japan. It was straight to the point on how he and the rest of the battalon felt against the enemy, which is something a little different from most WWII books.

The book is only 220, but it is not a quick read as the chapters are long and they account for different times in the war. Each chapter doesn't necessary flow with each other, but overall it makes sense.

The detail of how the men lived, how they died and what kept them going was good. It seemed like nothing was easy for any of them and this book has a lot of tragedy.

This is a decent to good book.
71 reviews
September 29, 2025
My great-grandfather was part of the 21st regiment/3rd division, and this book accounts almost his exact timeframe in the war. Obviously for me with personal attachment to the book, it was powerful to read the thoughts of a fellow marine who shared many of the same experiences as someone I was lucky to know when he was alive and call family. Given that this book was first published right after the war, at times it reads a little out dated and is negatively toned against the Japanese. Keeping this context in mind, the power of this book truly lies in it's ability to allow the reader a glimpse into the sacrifices and trauma of Guam and Iwo Jima.
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