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One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine Officer by Nathaniel C. Fick
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Nathaniel C. Fick Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2005-10-03 ISBN: 0618556133 Number of pages: 384 Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Book Reviews of One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine OfficerBook Review: A young Marine's journey to hell and back .. Summary: 5 Stars
Passing in Review
"One Bullet Away: the Making of a Marine Officer", by Nathaniel Fick
Review by M. Vince Turner
October 2005
One Bullet Away is a first-person story about a young Dartmouth graduate who decides to join the US Marine Corps, going through OCS (Officer's Candidate School) to become a Marine Corps officer.
Nathaniel Fick, a recent Captain with the United States Marines Corps, has created a detailed chronicle of his journey as that Marine officer from boot Marine officer at OCS to full-fledged 1LT (1st Lieutenant) First Recon Marine leading US Marines in war action in the Middle East. It is his story, well cataloged from his days before September 11, 2001 to his journey into Af-ghanistan and then Iraq.
There is raw honesty throughout this book. It says much about the man, Nathaniel Fick. It tells about the Marine Corps. It describes the anguish, anxiety, thrill and sense of conquest that take place in any war action as seen through the eyes of perhaps war's most important witness: the Marine, the soldier, the warrior: The one who is fighting the fight.
This book is deeply personal, thoughtfully self-reflective. Fick is unembarrassed to reveal fre-quent self-analyzing, periodic self-doubt. It is clear from this tale about one's personal journey through war that Fick is not afraid to be naked to the world describing his fears, anxieties, self-questioning.
A caring leader, Fick is rationally critical of upper echelon officers who often seem ill equipped or poorly informed to be instructing a team player on how to war the war. Some senior officers and some senior NCOs who have not been part of a reconnaissance group clearly do not under-stand the mission of a reconnaissance group. The routine frustrations this frequently brings about are elaborated on by Fick, but with respect.
In some respects One Bullet Away demythologizes the Marine Corps, somewhat piercing the Corps' image of macho superiority. Yet, in doing so Fick makes the Marine Corps more real, more human without detracting from that "Ooooh Rahhh!" gung ho psyche that forms the cen-terpiece of the Corps.
In some respects One Bullet Away is about one man's journey to hell and back. War, after all, is hell whether at the time of Alexander the Great or in this time of the Nathaniel Ficks of our world. This journey, however, is shared with other men for whom 1LT Fick has great care and concern. It is after all his responsibility to bring his men back alive from their mission, any mis-sion.
The detail laid out in this journey is elaborate, at times demanding the reader's fullest attention. One must pay careful attention so as not to lose the gist of what is taking place, or what has just taken place. This detail at times is articulated with certain labor. Yet, without that detail the reader would have less of a clear idea about what being in this firefight is all about.
Fick does not glamorize the war in Afghanistan or Iraq. The detail given on the Iraq war is far greater. Fick does not hesitate to question in his mind, or One Bullet Away, the moral wrong-ness or rightness of certain actions taken, certain decisions made. The reader is on this journey with 1LT Fick and his Bravo Company reconnaissance Marines. At times the reader feels the anxiety, the angst, the frustration and yes, their joy, their sense of conquest and success.
One Bullet Away is not self-adulating. The self-doubt Fick describes during certain decision-making moments bespeaks a man who possesses humility. More importantly, it describes a man who has an implicit love and care for his men. After all, in this war arena, he is their cus-todian, their leader, the one who must assure at all costs the survival of the Marines assigned to him. He accomplishes that admirably: Not one of his Marines is killed; only two are injured.
This book reveals courage, commitment, duty and honor in the worst of worldly circumstances. Young men hunting down and tracking the enemy on less than one meal a day are expected, commanded, to bring results. The men in Bravo Company are brought to life. We begin to know them and their idiosyncrasies and peculiarities. They bond. They are family. They live or die relying upon the skills and alertness of one another.
This is a first write for Fick, and it is excellent. Clearly he has put a labor of love into this book. His criticisms of the Marine Corps are directed at personalities, not the Corps itself. Some will take offense at some of his remarks. They are from the heart, neither sanitized nor colored for the sake of personal popularity or safety. One must remember this very important fact: Fick and his men, along with other companies, were on the front line in the center of the firefight or driving directly into it. It was their "Asses on the line", and their orders were not to fail.
While this book likely will appeal to a select audience, a wider audience should read it. Many of the characters in this book are, like Fick himself, very well educated. One Bullet Away dispels that myth that only the illiterate or less intelligent opt to put their lives in the eye of such dan-ger. The men in Marine reconnaissance, or Army Ranger and Delta forces, Navy SEALS or Air Force power jumpers, are a breed apart. These men must will themselves beyond the pain, beyond the exhaustion, beyond sleepless hallucinating and continue to perform, to excel.
The guts and grit required of and demonstrated by the men who are the principle, main charac-ters in One Bullet Away place them in a league solely their own, the elite of the elite.
I came away from this book asking myself, "Could I have done it? Could I have done what those men did?" A plaintive mental voice replies with some embarrassment, "Likely not. Likely not. But, I would have liked to have tried!"
Summary of One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine OfficerA former captain in the Marines? First Recon Battalion, who fought in Afghanistan and Iraq, reveals how the Corps trains its elite and offers a point-blank account of twenty-first-century battle.
If the Marines are “the few, the proud,? Recon Marines are the fewest and the proudest. Only one Marine in a hundred qualifies for Recon, charged with working clandestinely, often behind enemy lines. Fick?s training begins with a hellish summer at Quantico, after his junior year at Dartmouth, and advances to the pinnacle—Recon—four years later, on the eve of war with Iraq. Along the way, he learns to shoot a man a mile away, stays awake for seventy-two hours straight, endures interrogation and torture at the secretive SERE course, learns to swim with Navy SEALs, masters the Eleven Principles of Leadership, and much more.
His vast skill set puts him in front of the front lines, leading twenty-two Marines into the deadliest conflict since Vietnam. He vows he will bring all his men home safely, and to do so he?ll need more than his top-flight education. He?ll need luck and an increasingly clear vision of the limitations of his superiors and the missions they assign him. Fick unveils the process that makes Marine officers such legendary leaders and shares his hard-won insights into the differences between the military ideals he learned and military practice, which can mock those ideals. One Bullet Away never shrinks from blunt truths, but it is an ultimately inspiring account of mastering the art of war.
Military Books
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