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One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine Officer by Nathaniel C. Fick
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Nathaniel C. Fick Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2006-09-07 ISBN: 0618773436 Number of pages: 400 Publisher: Mariner Books
Book Reviews of One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine OfficerBook Review: True story but also a work of art because it transmits feelings Summary: 5 Stars
This book won the highest accolades from Amazon reviewers that are Marines or former Marines because of its veracity and fidelity. But One Bullet Away will engross you far beyond anything you may have experienced in a long time, particularly if you are not a Marine (like me).
I both read and listened to this work of art and preferred the audio version on CD. Andy Paris was superb as narrator, capturing the voices and personalities of the real Marines. My favorite character mastered by Paris was a particular drill instructor. I found that the library had only 2 audiobooks on this war and this was one of them. It's as if this particular war is less real or something.
Here you can find the perfect escape literature whether for a late summer vacation or more likely lack of one. The fact that Nathaniel Fick's story is true will in no way inhibit you from experiencing respite, escape and renewal that we all need from time to time.
What Nathanial Fick, a warrior philosopher, has achieved is to make the reader/listener "feel like a Marine," and my goodness this is a powerful and exhilarating way to feel when you're daily life is far from that of a Marine. Instead of the market forces that guide so much of your daily life, you get the social forces of Marine culture.
Fick's story begins with his decision to go into the Marines and become an officer after college graduation. Unlike his peers, he eschewed plans to establish a money-making career in order to do something difficult, sort of a personal journey to fulfill ideals of the sort associated more with the ancient Greeks than anything familiar today. This was during a time when the housing boom was heating up and college graduates generally had high expectations of achieving immediate wealth.
Initial entry training into the Marine Corp is where you, the reader/listener, begin to feel transported to this other world where the rules and the values are different. You get indoctrinated into a new system while experiencing extreme deprivations and hardships. You're completely unmoored from your old life system, and now you're hooked and can't put the book or CD player out of sight.
At this point you know you're early in the book and that Fick is going to become a Marine, but you don't know if you're going to make it, and so you hang on. And Fick just doesn't stop. He decides to go further and become an elite Recon Marine and training just gets more and more difficult.
Along the way, we keep finding out what we're becoming as we find out more about the Marines. Unlike elite military personnel from the other branches, Recon Marines do not dress differently or get treated differently than other Marines, because the Marines do not want to establish status differentials among themselves. Fick's got us in another world here. The mores of Marine culture are starkly different from what we've experienced, challenging our patterns for decision-making.
This culture has an esprit de corps more powerful than what we've experienced until now. Fick shows how this is supported by elite training, loyalty to one's unit and the quality of leadership. Once in Iraq, with all the dangers, we begin to experience camaraderie and a profound sense of belonging. So in the midst of extreme danger and a seemingly never-ending series of violent encounters, Fick has us feeling self-confident because we are Marines (that's the escapism part since few of us are Marines in the real world).
But Fick then takes us down a lonely path. His unit is so far out in front that he starts receiving flawed orders from the chain of command. There is just no answer for these situations. Fick has to balance the heavy weight of responsibility for the welfare of his men against the discipline of the leadership structure. We are made to feel how command in a real war in profoundly lonely. Nothing until now has prepared us for this experience.
At the end of the story, we re-enter the society with which we are familiar, and Fick still has us hanging on every word. Integration back to our world is difficult in some ways, but One Bullet Away has surreptitiously been leading to a strong and sweeping conclusion.
One Bullet Away ends up critiquing our society, which debased its values while Marines were fighting and dying for their non-market values in a hostile place far away. At that time, the war had disappeared from news headlines, replaced by the then dominant theme of euphoria from wealth-building via the housing boom. Americans turned further toward consumption, dramatically increasing the trade deficit as the good times appeared endless.
Paul (Jerry) Bremer had been sent to Iraq as the top American authority in May 2003. Bremer's decisions in this capacity are widely believed to have been motivated to ensure that the war would continue through the 2004 election, thereby assisting Bush II's reelection.
Recall, Bush I lost his 1992 reelection campaign despite having been wildly popular after the First Gulf War. The Bush family took it hard. In some ways this is reminiscent of Winston Churchill losing his reelection campaign after WWII ended. Political leaders are famous for being devastated when they lose an election after having won a war.
The Bush II team was not going be subjected to the same possibility - losing an election after winning a war. Ironically, the early success of the Marines contributed to their fear that the war would end too early. That is why they "Did a Bremer" on the military.
"Doing a Bremer": Bremer unilaterally, without consulting any military leaders in Iraq, made a series of decisions to rejigger the war. The effect was to make the war last at least through the 2004 election. Simultaneously on the home front, mortgage liquidity was pushed out hard using every method available. This liquidity was needed to keep the public enamored with newfound wealth as homes shot up in value.
The 2004 election results came in as planned but not without an enduring cost to the nation, particularly the families of those that serve in the military. The author, Nathaniel Fick, naturally felt that he had to do something in the interests of his men concerning this massive betrayal. This culminated in Fick's speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention on August 28, 2008.
Summary of One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine OfficerIf the Marines are “the few, the proud,? Recon Marines are the fewest and the proudest. Nathaniel Fick?s career begins with a hellish summer at Quantico, after his junior year at Dartmouth. He leads a platoon in Afghanistan just after 9/11 and advances to the pinnacle—Recon— two years later, on the eve of war with Iraq. His vast skill set puts him in front of the front lines, leading twenty-two Marines into the deadliest conflict since Vietnam. He vows to bring all his men home safely, and to do so he?ll need more than his top-flight education. Fick unveils the process that makes Marine officers such legendary leaders and shares his hard-won insights into the differences between military ideals and military practice, which can mock those ideals.
In this deeply thoughtful account of what it?s like to fight on today?s front lines, Fick reveals the crushing pressure on young leaders in combat. Split-second decisions might have national consequences or horrible immediate repercussions, but hesitation isn?t an option. One Bullet Away never shrinks from blunt truths, but ultimately it is an inspiring account of mastering the art of war.
Iraq Books
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