World War II: My Experiences as Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd Division
Harry C. Gravelyn was Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd "Thunderbolt" Infantry Division, United States Army, during World War II. He served in active combat from the landing at Normandy until a mortar took him out in Petite Langlir, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge. These are his wartime memoirs, which he started working on when he retired in his sixties and was still adding to at age ninety six, right up until the last moment before publishing.

This isn't the Hollywood version of war. This is matter-of-fact war from the viewpoint of the "grunts," the infantrymen, who in every war in every time, slog, crawl, and fight through rain, snow, mud, and dead bodies until they either die or stand on the contested ground and say, "Okay, this is ours now," in order that famous generals can claim victory.

More than 63,000 words, with a foreword by his son, Jim Gravelyn, this first-person account covering everything from pre-war training in the Michigan National Guard to the trip home on a hospital ship makes for fascinating reading. The book is hyperbole free but will nevertheless have you shaking your head in amazement, horror, or amusement at various times, and leave you with a sense of actually having been there in the European Theatre of Operations in World War II, as a grunt.
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World War II: My Experiences as Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd Division
Harry C. Gravelyn was Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd "Thunderbolt" Infantry Division, United States Army, during World War II. He served in active combat from the landing at Normandy until a mortar took him out in Petite Langlir, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge. These are his wartime memoirs, which he started working on when he retired in his sixties and was still adding to at age ninety six, right up until the last moment before publishing.

This isn't the Hollywood version of war. This is matter-of-fact war from the viewpoint of the "grunts," the infantrymen, who in every war in every time, slog, crawl, and fight through rain, snow, mud, and dead bodies until they either die or stand on the contested ground and say, "Okay, this is ours now," in order that famous generals can claim victory.

More than 63,000 words, with a foreword by his son, Jim Gravelyn, this first-person account covering everything from pre-war training in the Michigan National Guard to the trip home on a hospital ship makes for fascinating reading. The book is hyperbole free but will nevertheless have you shaking your head in amazement, horror, or amusement at various times, and leave you with a sense of actually having been there in the European Theatre of Operations in World War II, as a grunt.
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World War II: My Experiences as Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd Division

World War II: My Experiences as Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd Division

World War II: My Experiences as Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd Division

World War II: My Experiences as Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd Division

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Overview

Harry C. Gravelyn was Captain of Company D, 331st Infantry, 83rd "Thunderbolt" Infantry Division, United States Army, during World War II. He served in active combat from the landing at Normandy until a mortar took him out in Petite Langlir, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge. These are his wartime memoirs, which he started working on when he retired in his sixties and was still adding to at age ninety six, right up until the last moment before publishing.

This isn't the Hollywood version of war. This is matter-of-fact war from the viewpoint of the "grunts," the infantrymen, who in every war in every time, slog, crawl, and fight through rain, snow, mud, and dead bodies until they either die or stand on the contested ground and say, "Okay, this is ours now," in order that famous generals can claim victory.

More than 63,000 words, with a foreword by his son, Jim Gravelyn, this first-person account covering everything from pre-war training in the Michigan National Guard to the trip home on a hospital ship makes for fascinating reading. The book is hyperbole free but will nevertheless have you shaking your head in amazement, horror, or amusement at various times, and leave you with a sense of actually having been there in the European Theatre of Operations in World War II, as a grunt.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940157861339
Publisher: Travelyn Publishing
Publication date: 03/06/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Harry C. Gravelyn is still alive and kicking at 96-about-to-turn-97 as of date of publishing, still remembering new stories about the war or about training for the war, and still enjoying life although his eyesight has been destroyed by macular degeneration and his hearing is bad... he thinks from the constant explosions and near-misses in World War II. Any feedback on his book is guaranteed to delight him.
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