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Never Give Up the Jump: Combat, Resilience, and the Legacy of World War II through the Eyes and Voices of the Paratroopers, Wives, and Families of the 508th PIR [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 432 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x41 mm, weight: 567 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Mar-2023
  • Leidėjas: Knox Press
  • ISBN-10: 1637584288
  • ISBN-13: 9781637584286
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 432 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x41 mm, weight: 567 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Mar-2023
  • Leidėjas: Knox Press
  • ISBN-10: 1637584288
  • ISBN-13: 9781637584286
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"The daughter of a D-Day paratrooper and her husband, a PTSD therapist, discover a family legacy of love, trauma, and resilience when they set out to explore a vast trove of WWII correspondence, official military documents, personal effects, and unique militaria found in closets and basements after her father's death"--

The daughter of a D-Day paratrooper and her husband, a PTSD therapist, discover a family legacy of love, trauma, and resilience when they set out to explore a vast trove of WWII correspondence, official military documents, personal effects, and unique militaria found in closets and basements after her father’s death.

Young Sue Gurwell had always known that her father had been a paratrooper. An old camo parachute from Holland served as her backyard tent, and high on a shelf she mustn’t touch, eight red devils in parachutes grinned from the front of mysterious drinking glasses Dad had sent Mom during the war. And then there was the special poem in his roll-top desk she sometimes snuck a peek at, written by a member of Dad’s regiment. This poem was a premonition of the sergeant’s death. “Yes,” her dad told her, “He was right—he died on D-Day.”

But it’s not until 2016, after her parents had both passed away, that Susan Gurwell Talley and her husband Jack L. Talley begin to understand the true extent and significance of the wartime artifacts that had been staples of Sue’s childhood. The Talley’s discovered that Sue’s father, Lt. George L. Gurwell, Executive Officer, HqHq, 508th PIR, had silently squirreled away thousands of wartime documents in the family home.

Like most combat veterans, George was never one to talk about the war; but the historic collection of official records, correspondence, photographs, maps, memorabilia, cultural artifacts, and unique ephemera constitute quite possibly the most extensive, various, and complete documentation of the 508th held privately today.

This precious resource could not have passed into better hands than those of Jack and Sue Talley. Jack, a PhD psychologist specializing in PTSD, was the first to understand that George had PTSD symptoms that still lingered from the war years when he and George were introduced on June 6, 2001. That evening, the 57th anniversary of D-Day, George first opened up about the war, and preceded to talk late into the night. In that conversation lies the genesis of this book.
Authors' Note xiii
Introduction: The Journey Begins xvii
Susan Gurwell Talley
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and World War II Veterans xxvii
Jack Talley
Chapter I Prelude to Love and War
1(23)
Chapter II Pinehurst and Camp Mackall, North Carolina
24(34)
Chapter III Leaving Pinehurst: Sending the 508th to War, Round Robin Letters 1-7
58(25)
Chapter IV Preinvasion Jitters: The 508th in Northern Ireland and England, Round Robin Letters 8-14
83(21)
Chapter V D-Day and The Battle for Normandy
104(14)
Chapter VI Men Like That Never Die, Round Robin Letters 15-25
118(23)
Chapter VII Ghosts, Memories, and a Horrible Loneliness
141(18)
Chapter VIII Operation Market Garden: The Jump into Holland
159(20)
Chapter IX Seems Like a Bad Dream, Round Robin Letters 26-32
179(12)
Chapter X Dreaded Downtime
191(16)
Chapter XI We Cannot Give Up the Jump, Round Robin Letters 33-36
207(11)
Chapter XII The Ardennes Campaign: Jumping From A Truck into The Battle of The Bulge
218(26)
Chapter XIII The Ardennes Campaign: Horror in The Hiirtgen Forest
244(15)
Chapter XIV The Grandest People I've Ever Known, Round Robin Letters 37-42
259(16)
Chapter XV On Standby: Rescue Mission For Allied POWs
275(18)
Chapter XVI A Momentous Affair, Round Robin Letters 43-50
293(21)
Chapter XVII Guarding Ike: Occupation Duty In Frankfurt, Germany
314(19)
Chapter XVIII Sailing Home On The S.S. Madawaska Victory
333(10)
Epilogue: Finding Harry 343(8)
Appendix I Wives and Officers--Round Robin Letters 351(8)
Bibliography 359(4)
Endnotes 363(16)
Acknowledgments 379(2)
Index 381
Susan Gurwell Talley is the daughter of Lt. George Gurwell, an original member of the 508th PIR and the HqHq Executive Officer in WWII. Susan Gurwell Talley is a retired office manager. Her daughter served two tours, one in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, as an officer in the US Army Reserves, and is married to a retired US Marine Corps officer. Susan and her husband Jack share a passion for competitive sports, favoring WWII-era rifles and the M1 Garand in particular since 2004. They were shooting members on teams that won the National Match Winner plaques for the high M1 team in the National Team Infantry Trophy Match for 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2011 (record score).

Jack L. Talley and wife Susan share a rich history of familial and personal involvement with the US military. Both have volunteered with the Patriot Guard Riders and American Legion Post 304. A Georgia-licensed Ph.D. psychologist with over thirty years of post-doctoral experience, Jack has specialized in the diagnosis and treatment of veterans with PTSD since 2014.