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Into the Crucible
 
 
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Into the Crucible [Paperback]

James Woulfe (Author), James B. Woulfe (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)

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Book Description

December 6, 1999
This book describes the 54 hour exercise in which recruits are put through a series of taxing challenges whilst being denied sufficient food or sleep. Woulfe compares this training exercise with other schemes in other branches of service.'

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Into the Crucible + Making the Corps: 10th Anniversary Edition with a New Afterword by the Author + Devil Dog Diary: A day by day account of US Marine Corps training
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Presidio Press (December 6, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0891417079
  • ISBN-13: 978-0891417071
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 0.4 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #300,231 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

43 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (43 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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49 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Most Unique and Up-to-Date Book on USMC Bootcamp, May 13, 1999
By 
Day of Defiance "tangoyank" (California, United States) - See all my reviews
There are several book available about Marine Corps bootcamp, but this is the only one that reflects the restructuring of recruit training in 1996 that culminated with the addition of The Crucible--the final test that every recruit must complete before receiving his Eagle, Globe, and Anchor and earning the title United States Marine. I went through The Crucible, and this book made me understand its purpose, value, and signficance more than the actual experience itself. Capt. Woulfe has structured this book around the various "events" of The Crucible and explains the historical inspiration behind each event as well as its purpose in recruit training today. Although this book focuses on The Crucible (rather than on bootcamp in its entirety), it is a must-read for anyone about to ship off to bootcamp--reading this book will bring a greater understanding and sense of purpose to the daunting and often chaotic experience of Marine Corps bootcamp. I would also recommend this book to parents and friends of recruits, because it will help to explain the purpose of what goes on in recruit training. Additionally, I think any Marine who went to bootcamp prior to the much-talked-about addition of The Crucible will find this book to be a very enlightening dissection of how bootcamp has changed recently. "Into The Crucible" combines the best elements of a Marine bootcamp guide and a Marine Corps history book to make one motivating read! I highly recommend it to all Marines, past, present, and future--and to anyone else who knows a Marine or is interested in Marine history or training procedures. Semper Fi!
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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vivid portrait of a powerful rite of passage, April 20, 2005
"Into the Crucible: The Making of a 21st Century Marine," by James B. Woulfe, is a fascinating nonfiction book that takes the reader into the Crucible, a component of U.S. Marine Corps training. Woulfe describes the Crucible as "a fifty-four-hour endurance course in which recruits conquer challenge after challenge in increasingly demanding conditions [. . .]. It features little food and sleep, plus forty miles of hiking." Emphasizing teamwork and leadership, the Crucible features a series of obstacles named after heroic Marines, most of them Medal of Honor recipients. In his brief foreword to the book Lt. Gen. Victor H. Krulak (USMC, ret.) describes the Crucible as "the classic culminating event of a rigorous revolution in the recruit's life."

Woulfe's narrative follows a group of recruits and their drill sergeant as the team works its way through the grueling rite of passage. As the squad passes through the stations they learn about the extraordinary heroism of the Marines after whom the obstacles are named. Woulfe describes the obstacles, which test both the recruits' physical abilities and problem solving skills, in intriguing detail. Woulfe weaves into the narrative much information about Marine Corps history. He writes about pioneering African-American Marines and the history of women in the Corps; he also covers Marine achievements in the Civil War, World War I, the Vietnam War, and other conflicts.

The author skillfully weaves a portrait of the Corps that brings together its past (in the history recounted) and its future (in the recruits). We learn about the backgrounds, personalities, and goals of the recruits. Woulfe vividly portrays the physical toll that the Crucible takes on these aspiring Marines. The book illuminates Marine esprit de corps, values, and heritage while revealing the complex process that transforms young men and women into Marines. I found this book to be both informative and inspiring. As an Army officer, I salute Woulfe for his work, and I salute the Marines whose stories he tells.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring!, July 18, 2004
There are many books that look at the Marine Corps as a phenomenon, as a culture, as a training system, and as a psychology. There are many biographical and autobiographical surveys of those who make up the Corps past and present. However, this book is unique in looking at what has become known as the defining moment in the making of modern Marines -- the Crucible, a 54-hour rigourous test, an obstacle course to beat all obstacles courses, that recruits at the end of their basic training must pass in order to win the title of U.S. Marine.

This is the culmination, the capstone of the training. Author James B. Woulfe, now a captain in Marine Corps, who started out in the enlisted ranks in the 1980s, is assistant director of the Drill Instructor (DI) school at MCRD San Diego, the western training ground for Marines (recruits from east of the Mississippi go to Parris Island). Woulfe's book follows a dozen recruits and their DI through the stations of the Crucible.

In the Crucible, the body, mind and spirit of the recruit is tested. There are limits on food and rest designed to tax the recruits even more, as they work through the different trials of the Crucible. No one can make it through the Crucible alone -- most of the tests can only be done as a team; often members of the squad have to take a back-seat to their companions, sometimes dramatically (if a recruit has to pretend to be injured for the sake of the exercise, he is at the complete mercy of his squad's performance).

The Crucible has many stations, 32 combat exercises to complete in the 54-hour period. These challenges draw on the core values and chief skills developed during the previous weeks. As part of the indoctrination into the Marine Corps, the history of the Corps is written across the challenges. Eleven of the obstacles are named for Medal of Honour winners, with a twelfth named for another outstanding Marine; significantly, they are all enlisted/NCOs, not officers. The backbone of the Corps is the enlisted ranks, with sergeants at the top; there are more enlisted to officers by ratio in the Marine Corps than in any other service.

Woulfe begins with an introductory chapter that gives a very quick overview of the timeline of basic training as well as the emotions experienced through the eyes of several recruits. The beginning of the Crucible begins in the early morning hours, long before dawn, such that three days later the end of the Crucible will coincide with breakfast time, when survivors of the Crucible will eat their 'warriors' breakfast' as Marines.

Woulfe makes an important point throughout that while these are special men doing special things, they did not start out as being special other than that they opted to be Marines. The Marine Corps takes the average recruit and makes them something special -- Woulfe indicates that the Corps could take a bus-load of recruits heading to any of the services and turn them into Marines; still, it remains a success for the men who undergo this trial, one they are rightly proud of completing.

Through all of the grueling challenges, presented in good detail including the physical elements as well as the emotions of the men paritcipating, Woulfe carries the the narrative through at a brisk pace. The epilogue is moving, starting really with the final challenge, the climb of 'Mount Suribachi', the first pronouncement by the sergeant major of the recruits' transformation to Marines, and their final victory as men in the Corps. Truly inspiring!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The lights popped on silently, noticeably different from how they had come on for the past seventy-eight days. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
first class jenkins, warrior station, initial strength test, senior drill instructor, drill instructor school, series commander, endurance course, infiltration course, recruit training, fourth squad, drill instructors, campaign cover, ammunition cans, other recruits, bivouac site, two recruits, combat course
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sergeant Lee, Marine Corps, Medal of Honor, World War, Marine Division, Sergeant Gonzalez, Sergeant Cukela, New York, San Diego, Corporal Mackie, Iwo Jima, Lance Corporal Noonan, North Vietnamese, Lieutenant Harris, Los Angeles, Parris Island, Camp Pendleton, Mount Suribachi, Bronze Star, Khe Sanh, Marine Regiment, Pearl Harbor, Sergeant Timmerman, The Deeds, Gunnery Sergeant Howard
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