G Company's War

Two Personal Accounts of the Campaigns in Europe, 1944-1945

Nonfiction, History, Military, United States, World War II
Cover of the book G Company's War by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts, University of Alabama Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts ISBN: 9780817380892
Publisher: University of Alabama Press Publication: December 11, 1998
Imprint: University Alabama Press Language: English
Author: Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
ISBN: 9780817380892
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication: December 11, 1998
Imprint: University Alabama Press
Language: English

**This unique account of combat in World War II provides parallel day-to-day records of the same events as seen by two men in the same company, one an enlisted man, one an officer. ** 

G Company's War is the story of a World War II rifle company in Patton's Third Army as detailed in the journals of S/Sgt. Bruce Egger and Lt. Lee M. Otts, both of G Company, 328th Regiment, 26th infantry Division. 

Bruce Egger arrived in France in October 1944, and Lee Otts arrived in November. Both fought for G Company through the remainder of the war. Otts was wounded seriously in March 1945 and experienced an extended hospitalization in England and the United States. Both men kept diaries during the time they were in the service, and both expanded the diaries into full-fledged journals shortly after the war. 

These are the voices of ordinary soldiers--the men who did the fighting--not the generals and statesmen who viewed events from a distance. Most striking is how the two distinctly different personalities recorded the combat experience. For the serious-minded Egger, the war was a grim ordeal; for Otts, with his sunny disposition, the war was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, sometimes even fun. Each account is accurate in its own right, but the combination of the two into a single, interwoven story provides a broader understanding of war and the men caught up in it. 

Historian Paul Roley has interspersed throughout the text helpful overviews and summaries that place G Company's activities in the larger context of overall military operations in Europe. In addition, Roley notes what happened to each soldier mentioned as wounded in action or otherwise removed from the company and provides an appendix summarizing the losses suffered by G Company. The total impact of the work is to describe the reality of war in a frontline infantry company. 

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

**This unique account of combat in World War II provides parallel day-to-day records of the same events as seen by two men in the same company, one an enlisted man, one an officer. ** 

G Company's War is the story of a World War II rifle company in Patton's Third Army as detailed in the journals of S/Sgt. Bruce Egger and Lt. Lee M. Otts, both of G Company, 328th Regiment, 26th infantry Division. 

Bruce Egger arrived in France in October 1944, and Lee Otts arrived in November. Both fought for G Company through the remainder of the war. Otts was wounded seriously in March 1945 and experienced an extended hospitalization in England and the United States. Both men kept diaries during the time they were in the service, and both expanded the diaries into full-fledged journals shortly after the war. 

These are the voices of ordinary soldiers--the men who did the fighting--not the generals and statesmen who viewed events from a distance. Most striking is how the two distinctly different personalities recorded the combat experience. For the serious-minded Egger, the war was a grim ordeal; for Otts, with his sunny disposition, the war was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, sometimes even fun. Each account is accurate in its own right, but the combination of the two into a single, interwoven story provides a broader understanding of war and the men caught up in it. 

Historian Paul Roley has interspersed throughout the text helpful overviews and summaries that place G Company's activities in the larger context of overall military operations in Europe. In addition, Roley notes what happened to each soldier mentioned as wounded in action or otherwise removed from the company and provides an appendix summarizing the losses suffered by G Company. The total impact of the work is to describe the reality of war in a frontline infantry company. 

More books from University of Alabama Press

Cover of the book Three Voyages by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Time's River by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book The Point Is To Change It by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Theatre Symposium, Vol. 23 by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book José de Bustamante and Central American Independence by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book From Southern Wrongs to Civil Rights by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Old Mobile by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book The Productive Tension of Hawthorne's Art by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book The Pen Makes a Good Sword by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Realism and the American Dramatic Tradition by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Radical Affections by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book A Confluence of Transatlantic Networks by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book To Stand Aside or Stand Alone by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Hardaway Revisited by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
Cover of the book Eagle Days by Bruce E. Egger, Lee McMillian Otts
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy