A Sense of Values: American Warriors in an Uncertain World
David Bowne Wood. Andrews McMeel Publishing, $26.95 (258pp) ISBN 978-0-8362-8073-9
For almost a year, 48-year-old freelance journalist Wood lived with the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, a force of 2100 men as they trained at Camp Lejeune, crossed the Atlantic aboard the U.S.S. Wasp, landed on a Somalian beach and took part in a peacekeeping mission. Later, he accompanied the troops on a post-mission ``liberty'' in the French port of Toulon, then observed the emotional homecoming as the 24th MEU returned to its North Carolina base. Wood developed deep respect and admiration for the unit, and here takes particular delight in describing their struggle to live up to the standards of their Corps and also meet the day-to-day demands of their commanding officer, Colonel Matthew Broderick. Without sentimentality, Wood defines the Corps as an institution where ``the values of honesty, patriotism, morality, and duty are preserved against the corruptions of a society that seems to actively dishonor them.'' Among the 100 color photographs, there are too many shots of ships, aircraft, amphibious and land vehicles, but the pictures of individual Marines at work and play reveal much about the ethos of the Corps. (Oct.)
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Reviewed on: 10/03/1994
Genre: Nonfiction