Thursday, January 20, 2011

The Long Way Home, by David Laskin


The Long Way Home: An American Journey From Ellis Island to the Great War, by David Laskin
HarperCollins, 2010
348 pages plus b&w photos scattered throughout book, acknowledgments, sources, index

Description
When the United States entered World WAr I in 1917, one-third of the nation's population had been born overseas or had a parent who was an immigrant. At the peak of US involvement in the war, nearly one in five American soldiers was foreign-born. Many of these immigrant soldiers-most of whom had been drafted-knew little of America outside of tight-knit ghettos and backbreaking labor. Yet World WAr I would change their lives and ultimately reshape the nation itself. Italians, Jews, Poles, Norwegians, Slovaks, Russians and Irishmen entered the army as aliens and returned as Americans, often as heroes.

In The Long Way Home, award-winning writer David Laskin traces the lives of a dozen men, eleven of whom left their childhood homes in Europe, journeyed through Ellis Island, and started over in a strange land. After detailing the daily realities of immigrant life in the factories, farms, mines and cities of a rapidly growing nation, Laskin tells the heartbreaking stories of how these men-both conscripts and volunteers-joined the army, were swept into the ordeal of boot camp, and endured the month of hell that that ended the war at the Argonne, where they truly became Americans. Those who survived were profoundly altered-and their experiences would shape the lives of their families as well.

Epic, inspiring and masterfully written, The Long WAy Home isan unforgettable true story of the Great War, the world it remade, and the men who fought for a country not of their birth, but which held the hope and opportunity of a better way of life.




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