Synopses & Reviews
ALAMO DOUGHBOY is a true story about a private who served with the Tex-as/Oklahoma Ninetieth Division in the First World War, his two brothers and two cous-ins, all of whom grew up in the same small town in Minnesota. This engrossing account is told from the neglected perspective of an infantry soldier in the trenches, containing many letters, maps, and photographs. What was it like going over the top? Fighting the German soldiers? Being a dispatch runner? What happened November 11, 1918? Who were in the Lost Battalion? What kept the doughboys going, and what happened if they survived the brutal physical and emotional trauma and returned home? How did the war affect the family? Alamo Doughboy is a solid military history, yet it transcends the war book genre. It's also about the home front, a boy and his dog, faith, love, courage, and duty: “I hope that Kaiser will soon see that he had better stop while the stopping is good or before long he might wake up missing.” October 28, 1918 “It was almost an insane day. The evenings of the 11th, 12th and 13th were the wild-est thing in the way of joy let loose and happiness unrestrained . . .” November 20, 1918 “The boys were falling all directions, but old Judge kept going.” November 26, 1918.
Synopsis
ALAMO DOUGHBOY is a true story about an American private who served with the Tex-as/Oklahoma Ninetieth Division in the First World War.