Duty - A Father, His Son, and the Man Who Won the War

Duty - A Father, His Son, and the Man Who Won the War

von: Bob Greene

HarperCollins, 2009

ISBN: 9780061741418 , 304 Seiten

Format: ePUB

Kopierschutz: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX geeignet für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's Apple iPod touch, iPhone und Android Smartphones

Preis: 8,99 EUR

Mehr zum Inhalt

Duty - A Father, His Son, and the Man Who Won the War


 

When Bob Greene went home to central Ohio to be with his dying father, it set off a chain of events that led him to knowing his dad in a way he never had beforethanks to a quiet man who lived just a few miles away, a man who had changed the history of the world.Greene's fathera soldier with an infantry division in World War IIoften spoke of seeing the man around town. All but anonymous even in his own city, carefully maintaining his privacy, this man, Greene's father would point out to him, had "won the war." He was Paul Tibbets. At the age of twenty-nine, at the request of his country, Tibbets assembled a secret team of 1,800 American soldiers to carry out the single most violent act in the history of mankind. In 1945 Tibbets piloted a planewhich he called Enola Gay, after his motherto the Japanese city of Hiroshima, where he dropped the atomic bomb.On the morning after the last meal he ever ate with his father, Greene went to meet Tibbets. What developed was an unlikely friendship that allowed Greene to discover things about his father, and his father's generation of soldiers, that he never fully understood before. Duty is the story of three lives connected by history, proximity, and blood; indeed, it is many stories, intimate and achingly personal as well as deeply historic. In one soldier's memory of a mission that transformed the worldand in a son's last attempt to grasp his father's ingrained sense of honor and dutylies a powerful tribute to the ordinary heroes of an extraordinary time in American life.What Greene came away with is found history and found poetrya profoundly moving work that offers a vividly new perspective on responsibility, empathy, and love. It is an exploration of and response to the concept of duty as it once was and always should be: quiet and from the heart. On every page you can hear the whisper of a generation and its children bidding each other farewell.