To Hell and Back by Audie Murphy (1949, 1st edition) 274 pages.
I learned of this book from Goodreads friend, JD.
Audie came from a very poor crop-share farmer family. His mother had nine kids, two of which died. His father gave up on the family and walked out on them. Audie quit school in fifth grade to go to work and help provide food for the family by killing rabbit and squirrel. His mother worked so hard to provide but became sick and died when Audie was just sixteen years old.
Pearl Harbor was hit at this time, but he was too young to go fight. He lied about his age and Audie went to join the toughest service, the Marines, but they turned him away. He was too small and thin and had such a baby face. The Paratroopers also turned him away. They wanted “men”. He was, unfortunately, accepted by the infantry. He was not very happy because he had great ambitions of becoming a Marine or Paratrooper.
Little ol’ tough Audie had passed out during basic training, and was nicknamed “Baby”. His commanding officer tried to get him transferred to cooking school, where things wouldn’t be so rough on him. Audie was humiliated. This was how his entry into the service began. He would later prove to be one of the toughest, and bravest, infantryman, and the most decorated American combat soldier of World War II and has been described as the most highly decorated enlisted soldier in U.S. history (WIKIPEDIA), but you won’t hear about any of that in this war memoir.
Audie Murphy was primed and ready for action upon arriving on the beach at Sicily, Italy. He dreamed of being a soldier since he was twelve years old. He was prepared to ride the assault wave in, but, the beach had already been taken. As Audie put it, they “came in late, chugging ashore, like a bunch of clucks in a ferry boat.” (p. 1)
The troops were already fighting the Germans inland where they were headed, toward Salerno, then onto Mignano and north to Cassino, a treacherous hike through the mountainous terrain where passes were so narrow the mules had been known to fall to their deaths and the Germans were peppered and hidden throughout.
His troop later went in at the beach of Cavalaire, France, in a landing boat. It was here in France, on a hill near Holtzwihr, where he single-handedly neutralized the German stronghold, killing over 200 soldiers, allowing reinforcements to take it over and bust through the line once they arrived. Great story!
I really enjoyed all of his battle stories, but got lost in the conversations at times. I couldn’t tell who was talking, if it was Audie or some of the other guys. But, most of the time I felt like I was in the trenches with them. His stories are true and raw, and so incredibly unbelievable. He had seen almost his whole first troop, the ones he began with, die in battle. Then, while he was in the hospital recovering from a hit to his hip, nearly all of Audie’s second troop was killed. Later, Audie did suffer from PTSD, but he kept it well hidden.
Audie had become a Hollywood sensation after the war, and this book, with the help of Hollywood writer David McClure, brought him to the top. He was featured in 40 films, including “To Hell and Back” (1955), where he played his own part in the movie. (Wikipedia)
But, sadly, Audie was killed in a personal aircraft at age 45 on May 28, 1971 in Roanoke, Virginia. The plane took off with zero visibility in rain and fog and, flying too low, hit the side of a mountain, killing him, the pilot and four other passengers. (Wikipedia)
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BOOK-TO-MOVIE
To Hell and Back (1955), starring Audie Murphy
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I love kwinky-dinks!
My cousin, Sherry, called just as I started on this book. She asked, “What chu doin’?” I said, “Reading a book…To Hell and Back by Audie Murphy.” She said, “I’m blown away. I just got a puppy, a Siberian Husky, just five days ago and I named him Audie.” How about that?
…and in chapter two, one of Audie’s comrades, Snuffy, a Native American, was drunk while out in the trenches and said, “A little wine is good for the stomach.” (p. 21) I literally had just read this very verse in the Bible last night:
1 Timothy 5:23: No longer drink only water, but use a little wine for your stomach’s sake and your frequent infirmities.(NKJV)