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The Coldest War: A Memoir of Korea (Paperback)

by James Brady (Author) "The Korean War, which President Truman called a police action and Averell Harriman "a sour little war," and which today is largely forgotten, began forty..." (more)
Key Phrases: Dog Company, Mack Allen, Colonel Gregory (more...)
4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (26 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
As a new Marine second lieutenant, Brady, one-time publisher of Women's Wear Daily , joined Dog Company on the front line in Korea on Thanksgiving Day 1951 and departed the following Fourth of July with his hide intact. During that time he learned how to lead an infantry platoon in combat and later served as executive and intelligence officer of the company. The action sequences--patrols, ambushes, prisoner-snatching raids--are vivid and memorable, conveying the unique flavor of the second year of the "peculiar war." Giving the memoir distinction, however, are the author's comments on those he served with, the prickly relations between Marine officers and enlisted men, and the differences between Marine and Army troops. Brady's ingenuous account of how he learned to lead men in combat while he was scared to death is appealing. Photos.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From School Library Journal
YA-- A compelling account of Brady's year as a Marine lieutenant in the Korean War. This fascinating book packs twice the whallop for being both an informative and judicious look at America's "forgotten war" as well as a page-turner. That more Americans were killed (54,000) in this stand-off than in Vietnam is a fact few young people are aware of, and in these times of increased interest in reassessing our rationale and methods in Vietnam, the Korean war holds a remarkable series of parallels that will leave readers wondering how we could have repeated so many mistakes. Brady has an engaging style, placing poignant memories of lighting up in the trenches with his buddies alongside suspensefully drawn incidents of two-bit and grand-scale skirmishes in which those same buddies are carried off the field on stretchers. An insightful look at the changes that even a so-called liberal young man goes through in the peculiar human and male rituals of war adds to an already rich and satisfying book. --Catherine vanSonnenberg, San Diego Public Library
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin (June 8, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312265115
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312265113
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #48,653 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #2 in  Books > History > Military > Korean War > Personal Narratives
    #10 in  Books > History > Asia > Korea > South
    #15 in  Books > History > Asia > Korea > North

Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The Korean War, which President Truman called a police action and Averell Harriman "a sour little war," and which today is largely forgotten, began forty years ago, on the morning of Sunday, June 25, 1950, when 90,000 North Korean troops pushed across the 38th Parallel and came south. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dog Company, Mack Allen, Colonel Gregory, Red Philips, North Korean, Fox Company, Charley Logan, Marine Corps, Blue Boy, Basic School, The Coldest War, Colonel Youngdahl, John Chafee, Major Nicholson, Sea of Japan, World War, Bob Simonis, Captain Chafee, Easy Company, Yellow Sea, Jay Scott, Kimpo Peninsula, Operation Snatch, Rose Bowl, Sergeant Dodge
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The Korean War by Brian Catchpole
 

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Customer Reviews

26 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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44 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One Marine's View of the Early Cold War, May 27, 2000
By Steven S. Berizzi (Hartford, Connecticut) - See all my reviews
James Brady, The Coldest War: A Memoir of Korea (1990, New York: Thomas Dunne Books, St. Martin's Griffin edn., 2000)

This is a splendid little book about what one American statesman characterized, quite accurately, as "a sour little war." The reasons are clear. With the possible exception of the Falkland Islands War, no other conflict in the second half of the 20thcentury was fought over ground as consistently inhospitable as the three-year struggle in barren, frigid Korea. Author James Brady, who served as a Marine lieutenant there, describes the essence of the problem early in the book: "Hard enough fighting a war; in Korea, the cold could kill you." And he invokes the horrors of combat in the First World War and the Civil War when he makes this point: "In some ways, it wasn't a modern war at all, more like Flanders or the Somme or even the Wilderness campaign." Brady is a wonderful writer and creates marvelous word pictures of the war. Many operations took place after dark, and he writes: "The grenade, the knife, the shotgun, even the shovel and the axe were the weapons of night patrols." Brady also offers telling observations about matters important and trivial, including fearing the night as shells roared out "very low and directly overhead," feeling chagrined when he could not answer a colonel's question about the location of two machine guns which he commanded, using a wooden ammunition box as a toilet, urinating on his rifle to thaw it for firing, not changing underwear for 46 days while "on the line, living in holes," and subsisting for weeks at a time on c-rations. Nevertheless, according to Brady: "There was a purity about life on the line, a crude priesthood of combat." And he also remarks: "When you weren't fighting, the war was pretty good." Readers may be offended by some of Brady's recollection, including the incessant references to Koreans as "gooks" (except when he visits a village and addresses the inhabitants as "our Korean brothers"): The Korean bearers who deliver supplies to the line are known by everyone as the "gook train," and the universal eating utensil manufactured from a shell casing is known as a "gook spoon." Chinese soldiers always are "chinks." However, I found Brady's honesty engaging, even when it was politically incorrect. Brady's memoir is remarkably free of rancor, and, in fact, he appears to have respected his adversaries. Brady reports that some of the one million Chinese engaged in the war had been fighting continuously since the mid-1930s, first against the Japanese, then amongst themselves in the civil war which preceded the victory of Mao Zedong's Communists, and finally against the Republic of Korea, the United States, and their Allies. Nevertheless, Brady saves his highest accolades for his own First Marine Division, which he characterizes, without false modesty, as being "as powerful an infantry division as there had ever been in combat anywhere." Brady saves some of his most wry observations for superior officers, but he had unbridled admiration for his company commander Captain John Chafee, a graduate of Yale and Harvard Law School, who later was elected governor of Rhode Island and then had a distinguished career in the U.S. Senate. This book is not about grand strategy, national policy, or the geopolitics of the early Cold War. It provides a very narrow view of the Korean War. But, taken on its own terms, as the account of one Marine officer's experience, it is excellent.

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Seductive & Absorbing Description Of Life On The Ground!, July 5, 2000
By Barron Laycock "Labradorman" (Temple, New Hampshire United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
For anyone interested in learning more about the human experience of war, this is an unforgettable book. Expecting to avoid the futility of the draft by joining the Marine Corps right out of college, the author finds himself a young officer in Korea as a field officer commanding a rifle platoon. This memoir details what it is like to be a young, inexperienced, and frightened soldier on the ground when all Hell breaks loose. Like many of his generation, Brady discovers that time spent in trenches between episodes in combat are quite as burdensome as the firefights themselves, with too much time, too little comfort, and endless seas of ceaseless rain, snow, mud, and exposure to the elements for the uninitiated to wallow in.

Brady's account of the rapid education a naïve and untried young officer has to learn and accomplish to stay alive and in command as the fight erupts, evolves, and subsides. His description of the day-to-day experience of war in Korea is quite evocative, and he succeeds in spinning a very readable and entertaining introduction to the realities of life as a foot soldier. Defense of fixed-line trenches in a deadly barrage of enemy artillery is absolutely terrifying to the young marines, as are the long still nights, filled with a deceptive calm. The quick-changing extremes in Korean weather often provided additional challenges to the young marines, and he explains how the combination of sustained periods of cold with an eerie pregnant silence sometimes lulled the troopers into sometimes-deadly states of inattention. If war can be described as long periods of boredom punctuated by sudden explosions of murder and mayhem, then this book is a deadly accurate portrayal of the experience of war.

Too many of our contemporary citizens lack an understanding of the extreme nature of the experience of combat, and that periods of actual combat are usually short and staccato experiences that come with absolute surprise and subside just as suddenly. As important in understanding the enormity of the experience of war are the other elements; loneliness, boredom, and exposure to the elements. Under the most difficult of circumstances, ordinary human beings are called upon to make the most solemn and extreme sacrifices, and this book details the terrifying context in which all this unfolded in Korea better than anything else I have read on the subject. I heartily recommend this book, and hope it will be widely read.

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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Personality of the Forgotten War, August 12, 2000
By John Baker (Lawrenceville, New Jersey) - See all my reviews
James Brady's "The Coldest War - A Memoir of Korea" is at once both a personal view and a writer's view. Brady spent a little less than one year as a Marine officer in Korea as a rifle platoon leader, company exec, intelligence officer and finally a company commander. We are fortunate to have a writer of his caliber tell us his innermost thoughts as he grew from a green 23-year-old Second Lieutenant into a very mature, and war-weary First Lieutenant (still 23 years old) leaving the war, all in the period of about ten months. By his own admission, he was not a hero, and equally by his own admission, he had no intention of becoming one. He merely wanted to be a competent officer, and live through the experience of a lifetime, making as few mistakes as possible on the way. He saw action, he saw death, he experienced the loss of friends and describes all of this in stark detail, with no frills. It is a description war as it is, not Hollywood's version, and one gets the sense that if others in combat could write the way Brady does, the stories would all be very similar, and our history of war would be much more complete. Brady does not mince words, and his descriptions divulge criticism of shortcomings of higher echelon decisions and higher ranking officers alike, not from spite or in a desire to get back at those he didn't get along with, but with a clear eye to failings of leadership and communication common in all military systems, especially during combat. Walter Cronkite says this book reads like a novel, but I disagree. There is no plot, no happy ending. It is a wonderfully descriptive and detailed book about the personality of the Korean War, a "police action" which is only now getting its due. I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves history, and wants to learn more about Korea than can be learned watching all the episodes of "Mash" back-to-back.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Great Insight into a forgotten war
This book offers valuable insight into a war that almost all Americans have forgotten. It offers a firsthand account about what Korea was like for the men in the trenches. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Ben Kuhn

2.0 out of 5 stars terrible
Book reads like a novel and does not seem to capture the real experience of combat. There are events which may be historically acurate but does not seem to capture the true... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Shawn T. Buller

5.0 out of 5 stars The Last War of The Ancient Order
Orwellianly, the Korean War was termed a "Police Action" by President Harry S Truman, thereby obviating the need for a Congressional Declaration of War. Read more
Published 7 months ago by J. H. Minde

2.0 out of 5 stars In serious need of an Editor.
I have read many books on the Korean war and I found this one the most difficult to read. Many grammatical errors and sentences with entire words missing. Read more
Published 10 months ago by R. BLAKE

2.0 out of 5 stars A fair read, with problems...
This book was just ok. What bothers me is that Brady gives intricate details of his life during the war, but that was almost 40 YEARS before the book was written. Read more
Published 11 months ago by A huge fan

5.0 out of 5 stars A Knockout!
I first read, "The Coldest War" when I was in the military myself.

My training and duty seemed hard and long to me, but compared to what the guys in the Korean War... Read more
Published 14 months ago by BJ

5.0 out of 5 stars War - Up Close and Personal
The author recounts his time in Korea where he served as a Marine rifle platoon leader during the "Forgotten War". Read more
Published 15 months ago by Steve McCullough

4.0 out of 5 stars ineresting book
I found this book to a fine novel of the Korean War.Written from the perspective of a young Marine Lt.It had grit and also some light moments.I recommend it.
Published 18 months ago by Lawrence J. Paradis Sr.

4.0 out of 5 stars Brought back memories
I served in Korea with 3/7, USMC from Nov 1951 to Nov 1952.
This was a vivid reminder of that cold inhospitable place. Read more
Published on January 14, 2007 by Joseph F. Joyce

5.0 out of 5 stars A powerful look at Marines at war in Korea
In "The Coldest War: A Memoir of Korea," author James Brady vividly describes what it was like to be a junior officer in the Marine Corps during the Korean War. Read more
Published on February 16, 2006 by Michael J. Mazza

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