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Movie Theater Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

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Gunny Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Nov 5, 2007
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www.chinesefortunecalendar.com
I recently completed what I will predict is my book of the year for 2010. It is a novel, and one of the best stories that I have read in a long time. Here is an excerpt:

<span style="font-style: italic">Twenty minutes later Mellas received word to put the Bald Eagle on alert. It was another reconnaissance team, call sign Sweet Alice. They were fighting a running battle with a company-sized unit just south of Matterhorn. Sweet Alice had six Marines.
Mellas radioed the news to the work party over at Task Force Oscar. Something deep within him stirred as he watched the Marines run down the hill from where they had been filling sandbags. Entrenching tools and shirts in their hands, they streamed across the damp airstrip, running for their gear, running possibly to their deaths.

“Semper Fi brothers,” Mellas whispered to himself, understanding for the first time what the word “always” required if you meant what you said.</span>

2vnqt55.jpg


The book is titled “Matterhorn,” by Karl Marlantes. I knew within 25 pages that he had everything right, from the feeling of being a new rifle platoon commander to capitalizing the word Marine, but as I went deeper into the book and thus into the story, I knew in my gut that he had been there. And so, at 0230, I got out of my reading chair and went to the computer to see who this guy was. U.S. Marine. Lieutenant. U.S. Marine Rifle Company XO. Rhodes Scholar. 30 years to complete this book…

Now, I have never been to the country of Vietnam, and the time that this story takes place would have seen me in the 1st grade, but I have served in a few Marine infantry battalions in a multitude of billets, and in my mind this book ranks up there with the great war novels. For my collection of that period, it quickly moved to No. 1. (As an aside, the book was passed to me by a fairly senior officer that remarked that he didn’t really care for it all that much, so I knew right from the start that I probably would.)

Set in Quang Tri Province, RVN, 2dLt Mellas arrives to Bravo Company, of the 1st Battalion, 24th Marine Regiment and is assigned as the 1st Platoon Commander. Over a three month period, the reader follows Lt Mellas and experiences what the young men that fought that war experienced, from race issues and Agent Orange to careerists and leeches…melodrama, melancholy, masturbation and morons…

I was so absorbed that I could not put the book down, and those of you that have also served and chose as your profession the carry of the rifle and the pack, you will see a lot of familiar faces. I had the honor of meeting the author today and having him sign my book. Truly, he was a great guy. I was only able to talk to him for a little while, but I asked about some of the characters I liked, and sure enough he was able to tell me about his Marines, many characterized in his novel. One of the characters in the book that I liked the most, sadly I must admit, became real to me at the very same time I was reading the book, via an email from Afghanistan in which a friend told me that one of his best men had died. I’ll admit that I sat there and cried. More to follow…

This is a very good book. Although a novel, I believe it to be very much more…

Semper Fi, Karl Marlantes.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

I picked it up to look at and the first page I turned to he was talking about setting off a claymore by pulling a wire. Got disgusted and put it down.
Maybe I'll go back and look at it again
Semper Fidelis,
Tipy
Hotel 2/3 68-69
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

Do you mean because he was not using the M57? I do not remember this wire in terms of context. Was the wire attached to an M81 and some fuse to give them time or stand off? Curious.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

Book says they, the Marines, were placing claymores in front of their fighting holes and were detonated by pulling on a cord. Quoting the book. This is on page four.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

(Addressed to TIPY.) I do not know who I am speaking with here on the internet, you may have used dozens and dozens of them but only had a rudimentary class. You may have only used electrical firing. Non electrical is used mainly for dual firing and setting off a ring main.

There are many ways to set off a Claymore:

b. <span style="font-weight: bold">Nonelectrical Firing.</span><span style="font-style: italic"> The M18Al mine is
deliberately detonated by the operator pulling
or cutting a trip wire attached to a nonelectrical
firing device (fig. 9). A nonelectric blasting cap
attached to the firing device and crimped to a
length of detonating cord sets off the detonating
cord. At the other end of the detonating cord,
a second crimped nonelectric blasting cap,
which is inserted in one of the detonator wells,
detonates the mine.</span>

I mean you no disrespect Tipy, Semper Fi, but I stand by the fact that this gentleman got his details straight. In a book review online, someone said they could not believe that Marines would talk using the kind of language in the book. HaHA.

From "Helmet For my Pillow,"1957, Robert Leckie:

<span style="font-style: italic">"Always was the word. Always there was that four-letter ugly sound that men in uniform have expanded into the single substance of the linguistic world. It was a handle, a hyphen, a hyperbole; verb, noun, modifier; yes, even a conjunction. It described food, fatigue, metaphysics. It stood for everything and meant nothing; an insulting word, it was never used to insult; crudely descriptive of the sexual act, it was never used to describe it; base, it meant the best; ugly, it modified beauty; it was the name and the nomenclature of the voice of emptiness, but one heard it from chaplains and captains, from Pfc.'s and Ph.D's -until, finally, one could only surmise that if a visitor unacquainted with English were to overhear our conversations he would, in the way of the Higher Criticism, demonstrate by measurement and numerical incidence that this little word must assuredly be the thing for which we were fighting."</span>

(I hope you read this C.S. Food, fatigue, metaphysics.)
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

It's on my reading list. Thanks for the recommendation.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

There was a long wait list for this book at my local library, but I finally got it. This book is absolutely outstanding. I highly recommend it.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

I read a lot of this type book. I bought it in the airport book store about a year ago. I tried to get into it but for some reason I just can't get into the groove with it. Not saying its not a good book or anything. I hope I can pick it up again and get it going.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

I think this book is a great American classic war novel, along with Red Badge of Courage, Naked and the Dead, and Thin Red Line. It's that good.
 
Re: Matterhorn - A damn Good read !!!

Best book I read last year. I never had an idea what those "bush" Marines went through on patrol and protecting remote fire bases. I wonder if they will ever try to represent this classic on the big screen?