The Greatest Generation Speaks: Letters and Reflections
The Greatest Generation Speaks: Letters and Reflections book cover

The Greatest Generation Speaks: Letters and Reflections

Hardcover – November 30, 1999

Price
$9.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Random House
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0375503948
Dimensions
5.85 x 1 x 8.51 inches
Weight
15.2 ounces

Description

The popularity and credibility of charismatic news anchor Tom Brokaw ensured bestseller status for The Greatest Generation , Brokaw's homage to the Americans who survived and overcame the depression and World War II. The Greatest Generation Speaks expands his thesis that we owe a huge debt of gratitude to those tough and courageous men and women for ensuring the freedoms and comforts that Americans enjoy today. Their stories, culled from letters, interviews, and personal histories of the Greatest Generation and their family members, are anecdotal but extremely powerful, showing how men and women were sustained by simple ideals of patriotism, family, and fair play. This individualistic portrait is exactly how Americans saw themselves: Brokaw's book is a valid reflection of the times. During a period of economic hardship and in a country united by the war effort, choices were simple; few people questioned why America was fighting Germany and Japan. Adversity brought out the best, especially in an optimistic culture like America's. As the soldier who found Beethoven's pianos in a Weimar house says after his unit is shelled, "Nothing like a close call to make the morning more beautiful." The greatest impression that war veterans seem to carry back from war is a sense of comradeship that, in spite of pain and loss, render their war years the most rewarding of all their life experiences. Modern life doesn't necessarily have the same certainties. The Greatest Generation Speaks is a healthy reminder of the foundations on which American society is built. --John Stevenson "When I wrote about the men and women who came out of the Depression, who won great victories and made lasting sacrifices in World War II and then returned home to begin building the world we have today—the people I called the Greatest Generation—it was my way of saying thank you. But I was not prepared for the avalanche of letters and responses touched off by that book—more stories and wisdom from that generation and time. I had written a book about America, and now America was writing back."xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0—Tom Brokaw From the Inside Flap "I first began to appreciate fully all we owed the World War II generation while I was covering the fortieth and fiftieth anniversaries of D-Day for NBC News. When I wrote in The Greatest Generation about the men and women who came out of the Depression, who won great victories and made lasting sacrifices in World War II and then returned home to begin building the world we have today--the people I called the Greatest Generation--it was my way of saying thank you. I felt that this tribute was long overdue, but I was not prepared for the avalanche of letters and responses touched off by that book.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0Members of that generation were, characteristically, grateful for the attention and modest about their own lives as they shared more remarkable stories about their experiences in the Depression and during the war years.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0"Their children and grandchildren were eager to share the lessons and insights they gained from the stories they heard about the lives of a generation now passing on too swiftly. They wanted to say thank you in their own way. I had wanted to write a book about America, and now America was writing back.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0"The letters, many of them written in firm Palmer penmanship on flowered stationery, have given me a much richer understanding not only of those difficult years but also of my own life. They give us new, intensely personal perspectives of a momentous time in our history. They are the voices of a generation that has given so much and wants to share even more.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0"Some of the letters were written from the front during the war, or from families to their loved ones in harm's way in distant places. There were firsthand accounts of battles and poignant reflections on loneliness, exuberant expressions of love and somber accounts of loss.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0"It seems that everyone in that generation has something worthwhile to contribute, and so we have included some pages in The Greatest Generation Speaks for others to share memories at once inspirational and instructive.xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0"If we are to heed the past to prepare for the future, we should listen to these quiet voices of a generation that speaks to us of duty and honor, sacrifice and accomplishment. I hope more of their stories will be preserved and cherished as reminders of all that we owe them and all that we can learn from them." --Tom Brokaw Front-jacket photo: "She said yes!" An American G.I. had proposed marriage to his girlfriend back home, and when her letter arrived, saying yes, he propped her photograph up in his helmet and had a buddy take this picture. --(UPICorbis-Bettmann) "When I wrote about the men and women who came out of the Depression, who won great victories and made lasting sacrifices in World War II and then returned home to begin building the world we have today—the people I called the Greatest Generation—it was my way of saying thank you. But I was not prepared for the avalanche of letters and responses touched off by that book—more stories and wisdom from that generation and time. I had written a book about America, and now America was writing back."xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0—Tom Brokaw Tom Brokaw , a native of South Dakota, graduated from the University of South Dakota with a degree in political science. He began his journalism career in Omaha and Atlanta before joining NBC News in 1966. Brokaw was the White House correspondent for NBC News during Watergate, and from 1976 to 1981 he anchored Today on NBC. He's been the sole anchor and managing editor of NBC Nightly News with Tom Brokaw since 1983. Brokaw has won every major award in broadcast journalism, including two DuPonts, a Peabody Award, and several Emmys. He lives in New York and Montana. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Few children relate easily to the young lives of their parents. Events that precede our own births automatically fall into the category of "history," a distant time however few years have actually passed. For the baby boomers, the army of children produced by the men and women who began their families once the war was over, the disjunction between their world and the world of their parents could hardly have been greater. One represented deprivation, sacrifice, and hard-won prosperity; the other, greatly expanded opportunity and, even during Vietnam, more personal choices. Those differences led to some historic and well-documented rifts-indeed, to a cultural revolution that since has cooled. Now, based on many of the letters I received, as the boomers grow older they also become much more aware of what their parents had endured and the legacy of their early challenges. In watching her father care for her mother after a debilitating stroke, Janet McKeon of O'Fallon, Illinois, realized that the strength of their relationship grew out of their war experience. As a member of the early Baby Boom generation who lived through the Vietnam years, I thought we were the group who had been wronged, with our boyfriends/husbands fighting in a faraway place in a war that nobody wanted to be a part of, and with no appreciation by others of what we went through. Your book certainly gave me a different perspective on that. But that's not all your book did for me. It made me wonder about my own parents' participation in and life during the war. Of course I knew my dad had served and that my older sister was born during the war, but he never talked about it and I guess I was never interested enough to ask. Sad to say, but during the past year my dad and I have had a lot of time to talk since my mother had a stroke and required constant care. I made a three-hour trip home every week to help with her care and it was during this time that he started telling me about their life during the war. What an eye-opener these stories were to me. It was hard to believe that in all those years since the war they had never complained about those hardships, the separations and the fear of the bombing missions (my dad was a bombardier who flew missions out of England). I had always seen my parents as good, hardworking people but the year that we cared for my mother showed me their strength, which they obviously also had during the war years. My dad cared for her 24 hours a day, never complaining, always appreciative of the help my sisters and I gave, but never demanding or expecting it. My mother endured the helplessness and, at the end, the hopelessness with quiet dignity until she died in May... My real reason for writing to you is to urge you to use your public voice to remind members of my generation who are still lucky enough to have one or both parents alive, to Jisten to their stories before they are lost forever. Mike McReaken, of Manvel, Texas, wrote to describe a similar experience: My father passed away last year after a three-year struggle with the effects of a severe stroke. He was at home because of the love and devotion of my mother, his wife of 55 years. My dad was at Pearl Harbor on one of the few ships of the line that was able to escape the sneak attack. For many years I tried to get my dad to tell me what it was like on that Sunday morning. He never would-or could-talk about it.... It was difficult to read The Greatest Generation without tearing up or being emotionally choked up to know of the hardships, lossy and joy that my parents'generatiOn suffered through. After watching my mother care for Dad since the day of his stroke, I always knew it was because of her unconditional love for him, and his deep-seated fear of being placed in a nursing home. But after reading about the many others in Ile Greatest Generation, I also understand and appreciate more why my parents made the choices and decisions that they did throughout their entire lives together. Some children of the Greatest Generation have their own memories of the war years. John E. Smith of Soldotna, Alaska, was living in California as a young child. My first memories are of my grandfather, grandmother, aunt, and mom gathered around the radio at night listening to the news. Night after night this took place. No talking on my part was allowed as every word was listened to with a gravity I have never since felt. Sometimes the broadcasts were very hard to hear, as there was a great deal of static noise. I still remember looking around at my family and seeing faces so serious that I was afraid. Over time, I learned that my dad was in England getting ready to fight Hitler. I didn't learn until after the war exactly what he did. I did not find out from him, either; my grandmother had to tell me. My father never spoke to me in any detail about the war. I learned that he was part of the Red Ball Express hauling mostly fuel to Patton. He went to Europe six days after D-Day as a buck sergeant and came home a battlefield-commissioned captain. After the war, the Army Air Corps became the Air Force and my father went with the Air Force. The reason we moved to California was also for the war effort. My mother drove a wrecker for the military. My aunt and grandmother were building airplanes, and my grandfather was a tool and die maker also involved with building airplanes. One of the things that I to this day remember clearly is that I once saw a poster for Rosie the riveter and she had a blue and white hankie tied around her head. That night when my aunt came home she was wearing the same hankie around her head, and I thought the poster was of her. I also remember shortages. My grandmother complained the most. Grandma liked to bake and the two most essential things, butter and sugar, were always in short supply. Many people also talk about gasoline being rationed, but rubber, i.e., tires, was also in short supply. My grandfather was something of a genius in repairing tires that were no good. He had built a little "vulcanizer," he called it. He would recap portions of old tires that other people said were not repairable. I remember people coming over at night with an old damaged tire asking Grandpa to please fix it, and he would. When I was four years old I went from house to house with other kids asking people to donate any old aluminum pots or other aluminum they might have so it could be made into airplanes.... I remember V-E [Day] as very confusing. My mother and aunt broke down and cried. My mother was essentially out of control and no one was able to make her stop crying. I was very scared, and everyone tried to tell me it was because she was so happy, but I could not believe this until much later when she did stop. My dad finally came home in 1946!xa0xa0I didn't even know him. My father never really spoke to me (or anyone) about the war. When I asked him about his being commissioned an officer in the field, he only said that they were short of experienced men and that he was most experienced so they "appointed" him. He did not like being an officer and resigned his commission in 1946 to become a master sergeant. My father passed away in 1972. His civilian funeral was held in Riverside, California. We then placed his flag-draped casket on a train. My mother was not in good health and could not go with him on the train. I rode with him in the baggage car to San Francisco, where he had a military burial with full honors. This is where I learned about some of what he had done in Europe. I still do not know how his fellow soldiers learned about his funeral but there were about fifteen men [there]. We spoke a little after the ceremony and they informed me of his bravery and leadership under fire. Most of these men were in tears and there was a lot of emotion displayed for a few moments. Then it was suddenly over, and they all (to a man) began to change the subject and start telling jokes. Each seemed to be embarrassed that they had spoken at all. I will never forget that day, or those men. I have tears in my eyes now, just writing about it. Like you, I was raised by those men and women who rarely spoke of their sacrifice and heroism. Thank God they were there! Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "I first began to appreciate fully all we owed the World War II generation while I was covering the fortieth and fiftieth anniversaries of D-Day for NBC News. When I wrote in
  • The Greatest Generation
  • about the men and women who came out of the Depression, who won great victories and made lasting sacrifices in World War II and then returned home to begin building the world we have today--the people I called the Greatest Generation--it was my way of saying thank you. I felt that this tribute was long overdue, but I was not prepared for the avalanche of letters and responses touched off by that book.        Members of that generation were, characteristically, grateful for the attention and modest about their own lives as they shared more remarkable stories about their experiences in the Depression and during the war years.        "Their children and grandchildren were eager to share the lessons and insights they gained from the stories they heard about the lives of a generation now passing on too swiftly. They wanted to say thank you in their own way. I had wanted to write a book about America, and now America was writing back.        "The letters, many of them written in firm Palmer penmanship on flowered stationery, have given me a much richer understanding not only of those difficult years but also of my own life. They give us new, intensely personal perspectives of a momentous time in our history. They are the voices of a generation that has given so much and wants to share even more.        "Some of the letters were written from the front during the war, or from families to their loved ones in harm's way in distant places. There were firsthand accounts of battles and poignant reflections on loneliness, exuberant expressions of love and somber accounts of loss.        "It seems that everyone in that generation has something worthwhile to contribute, and so we have included some pages in
  • The Greatest Generation Speaks
  • for others to share memories at once inspirational and instructive.        "If we are to heed the past to prepare for the future, we should listen to these quiet voices of a generation that speaks to us of duty and honor, sacrifice and accomplishment. I hope more of their stories will be preserved and cherished as reminders of all that we owe them and all that we can learn from them." --Tom Brokaw
  • Front-jacket photo:
  • "She said yes!" An American G.I. had proposed marriage to his girlfriend back home, and when her letter arrived, saying yes, he propped her photograph up in his helmet and had a buddy take this picture. --(UPICorbis-Bettmann)

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Well Done

A very moving look at the people who sacrificed so much for this country and did so quite selflessly. Their stories, feelings, and values are lovingly preserved here and provide inspiration to a currently valueless world.
76 people found this helpful
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Honored Memory

In 1987, my mother, brother, and I walked through the American Military Cemetary in Luxumburg - where thousands of men are buried from the Battle of the Bulge. It is a peaceful, dignified place. We met a women who had finally found the grave of her brother who had died in the battle more than 40 years before. I cried for these men who gave the supreme sacrifice nine years before I was born. Thank you for your sacrifice. Thank you, Mr. Brokow, for a well written book that gives honor where honor is due.
39 people found this helpful
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Eternal Thanks To Those Living And Those Who Have Died

There is absolutely nothing that is less than superlative about this book. Mr. Brokaw has at once paid tribute to those who do not receive our thanks often enough, and has ensured these men and women and what they gave to us is never forgotten. I am one of the thirty-something's that were a group who were felt may not be interested or moved by these stories. It is not possible to experience every emotion from joy to despair, and finally horror as this book is read. To those who say we take what we have for granted, they are, for the most part correct. Over 274,000 men and women died in WWII alone to preserve what they had then, and then passed to us a Country that was so loved, that immigrants would arrive here, turn around and risk and lose their lives for their new home, many times fighting their original birthplaces! I don't know a stronger way for someone to endorse this Country. And in the last Presidential Election only 43% of those with the gift of freedom to choose their leaders bothered to do so. I was astounded by the men of the "Sweet 16" who's story I never knew. These men, these black men, fought for their Country, the same Country that allowed Prisoners Of War, to use facilities that were denied to them due to the color of their skin! What is the word for that? Patriotism, not even close. Read the words of Walter Morris of the "Sweet 16", and then try not to place him on a hero's pedestal. "Hispanics" produced 12 Congressional Medal of Honor Recipients. Women served at the front lines, and were as exposed to combat danger as the men. And many of them never came home. Why does it take a war to create moments, hours, and days, that we do not experience every day? A Rabbi giving council and comfort to non-Jews, Protestant Ministers doing the same for a Jewish or a Catholic soldier, a Priest doing likewise. There is no word in my opinion that can describe the Rabbi that placed his hand into the "Fertilizer" that were once Families. Maybe there would be words if the Holocaust were an entirely unique event, instead of a recurring event to this day. Hitler referred to the Armenian Genocide perpetrated by the Turks, and the fact that "who remembers?" when a general expressed concern as to how they could possibly carry out such evil as they had planned for the Jews. Horror, evil, read "The Rape of Nanking", very tough to read through. Stalin's slaughter of tens of millions, The Khmer Rouge slaughter of Cambodians, Hutu And Tutsi of Africa just a few short years ago, and the "Former Yugoslavia" with the hideous phrase "Ethnic Cleansing" is still not really over. There need be no worry that this "Greatest" generation, those that came before and after, and who fought for their Country will be ever be forgotten. Mr. Brokaw has set in motion a wave of remembrance, the fact that every day we need realize what we have, and what we could have lost. A sad revelation is that we who owe what we have, have allowed the erosion of respect to the point that Veterans must seek a Constitutional Amendment so the Flag Of The United States, the flag they fought under and for, should not be allowed to be burned by those who's ability to express themselves is so impaired that burning a flag is the best they can do. A mindless, offensive act will always draw attention. The idea that burning the flag is a freedom is difficult to deny. But what is worse are the generations who are so bereft of respect, they burn a symbol that represents the freedom for their hostile behavior. If we all could understand our History and not just know it as facts of the past, Flag-Burning would be a non-issue. Democracy is the most demanding form of citizenship; it is not one that suffers passive or oppressive behavior. (The words that follow are a mix of quotes, and for that I apologize.) "Democracy is advanced citizenship, it will demand that you stand in rage and silence, while a fellow citizen advocates something that you would spend your lifetime resisting" Sir Winston Spencer Churchill (half American) "No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time" 11/11/47
36 people found this helpful
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Greatest Generfaton Speaks

I Sent Mt. Brokaw a short essay in response to his first WWII Book Greatest Generation. Several months later his office contacted me for permission to use my essay in his new book. I agreed and a version of my essay appears on pages 191-92.
It was never my intention to write to him for publication. I was telling him a story in return for his telling a large number in his book.
I note that he says that he received many manuscripts fomr vets like me. I visited a the National Archives (College Park Maryland)and ther Library of Congress. Neither one had a place to receive and protest manuscripts like the ones Mr. Brokaw received.
If we are, as he contends, the Greatest Generation, then that which documents our "greatness" deserves to be preserved.
After all the Library of Congress has all of Adolph Hitler's papers How about us?
Great Book Mr. Brokaw and in the right spirit of things. Mr. Brokaw, in lucid English and great sense of editing and selection serves well those old WWII GI's to whom he attributes greatness.
22 people found this helpful
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How often do we say Thank You?

Have you ever told someone from The Greatest Generation thank you for all they endured during those years from 1941-1945? Read this book and you will discover more than enough reasons to appreciate the contributions of men and women, blacks and whites during the War Years. Was everything perfect? No, but they all worked to make things better for the world. Read the book and understand.
11 people found this helpful
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Thank you for giving us the World!

As the son of a WWII Veteran I was anxoius to read this book. My father had served with the 795th MP Battalion in Algeria, Italy and Northern France. The letters and stories contained in the book are moving. I read many while fighting off the tears of sadness and pride. I would recommend this book to anyone who is interested in the history of our nation, or to those who have parents that are vetrans of the war.
7 people found this helpful
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Interesting; emotional

Tom Brokaw, one of the best news reporters most of us know, wrote a very nice but truthful novel about depression and World War II. "The best generation" refers to the noble people who survived and did not through these difficult times. I highly suggest this incredible treasure to those interested in the subject: you will not regret your choice.
7 people found this helpful
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An Outstanding Book about an Outstanding Generation

Mr. Brokaw's second book about the World War Two generation is another great tribute honoring those who sacrificed so much for America. This book let the World War Two generation speak for themselves and tell their story better than any historian or second hand author could do.
5 people found this helpful
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Vacuous Tripe

Worse even than the nonsense Brokow prattles on the television. Unconscionable slop served up to a generation who should have the wits to know when they're being pandered to.
5 people found this helpful
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Okay, when Tom doesn't get in the way.

"The Greatest Generation Speaks" is an easy follow-up to The Greatest Generation: In this little book, Tom Brokaw forwards many of the letters he received after writing (with a lot of help) the first book.
Perhaps the follow-up is a little better because more space is devoted to the words of those who lived through the Depression and World War 11. Their experiences speak for themselves. The over-patriotic and sappy text that introduces each of their letters just gets in the way.
I have no doubt about Mr. Brokaw's good intentions. And I don't want in any way want to show disrespect toward the courageous men and women who are the subjects of these two books.
But bad writing is bad writing, and this applies to the 20 percent of the book that Mr. Brokaw and his assistants produced. The subjects deserve simple respect, not a gusher of uninhibited, flag-waving adulation.
If you are interested in reading more compelling, honest and well-written first hand accounts of this era, I suggest "The Good War" by Studs Terkel.
4 people found this helpful