Home
The Bed I Made: A Journey of Fulfilled Hope, Fifty Years in the Making
Barnes and Noble
The Bed I Made: A Journey of Fulfilled Hope, Fifty Years in the Making
Current price: $17.95
Barnes and Noble
The Bed I Made: A Journey of Fulfilled Hope, Fifty Years in the Making
Current price: $17.95
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
The Chosin Reservoir, one of the most harrowing battles of modern warfare, was one of the toughest tests passed for the greatest fighting force the world has ever known: The United States Marine Corps. For Joe Lynch, the greater test would be the fifty-two year battle with PTSD that followed.
When Joe landed in Korea with the 1st Provisional Marine Brigade on August 2, 1950--his nineteenth birthday--the North Korean People's Army had all but secured victory in their unprovoked invasion of South Korea and their desire to unite the peninsular under communist rule. But the Fire Brigade, as these Marines were known, weren't going to let it happen.
Follow Joe through the most famous Marine Corps battles during the opening months of the Korean War in this gripping and heartfelt personal account of a gruesome war. The grueling Pusan Perimeter, the unlikely and perfectly executed Inchon Landing, the hard-fought but swift repatriation of Seoul, and the inhuman Chosin Reservoir Campaign are recounted in vivid prose through this young Marine's eyes. There is no glorification of war, only of the courage displayed and the heartbreak experienced by men who, only months before, couldn't find Korea on a map.
Thrust into battle undermanned and poorly equipped, the Marines, led by the likes of Generals Lewis B. (Chesty) Puller, and Oliver P (O.P.). Smith, proved their worth and saved a nation. Deposited back into civilian life, this Marine would carry the weight of war for over five decades. His medals for bravery, both in Korea, and later with the New York City Police Department, merely masked his personal struggle to reunite with his former happy and carefree nature, and to prevent his death... by his own hand.
Joe's heroism in Korea pales in comparison to the courage he displays in sharing this personal and revealing account of courage, tragedy, and improbable triumph over the demons of PTSD. But his story is not his alone. His is the story of combat veterans of WWII, Vietnam, and every war before and after. It is the shared story of the uncounted hidden heroes among us who fight their own daily battles of survival.
One reader says: