War correspondent : from D-Day to the Elbe / Holbrook Bradley
Material type: TextPublisher number: :Atlantic Publishers & Distributors | :7/22 Ansari Road Darya Ganj New Delhi Publication details: New York : iUniverse, ©2007Description: xxii, 192 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cmISBN: 9780595397174Subject(s): News media, journalism, and publishing | Bradley, Holbrook, -- 1916- | United States. -- Army. -- Infantry Division, 29th -- History | War correspondents -- United States -- Biography | War correspondents | United States. -- Army. -- Infantry Division, 29thDDC classification: 070.4499 BRAItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | SNU LIBRARY | 070.4499 BRA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | 26399 |
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070.449 DUB American journalists in the Great War : | 070.44929 ALT The religious press in Britain, 1760-1900 | 070.44950 MUS Science, time and space in the late nineteenth-century periodical press | 070.4499 BRA War correspondent | 070.4499 PAN My Own Witness | 070.4499 PRE We saw Spain die | 070.44994 BES Reporting the Second World War |
During World War II, author Holbrook Bradley's frontline stories of the 29th Division became a daily must-read in the pages of the Baltimore Sun. Between 1943 and 1945 thousands of family, friends, lovers and total strangers followed Bradley's reports as the chronology of Hitler's defeat unfolded. Now, this World War II correspondent retells the story of the 29th Division's march from Normandy to the Elbe in a more personal narrative. He tells the intimate details of his life as an 'embedded' war correspondent. From the beaches of Normandy to the crossing of the Rhine and the early days and duties of the occupation of Germany, Bradley chronicles the collapse of a nation physically destroyed by hubris and a war that changed the face of Europe
During World War II, author Holbrook Bradley's frontline stories of the 29th Division became a daily must-read in the pages of the Baltimore Sun. Between 1943 and 1945 thousands of family, friends, lovers and total strangers followed Bradley's reports as the chronology of Hitler's defeat unfolded. Now, this World War II correspondent retells the story of the 29th Division's march from Normandy to the Elbe in a more personal narrative. He tells the intimate details of his life as an 'embedded' war correspondent. From the beaches of Normandy to the crossing of the Rhine and the early days and duties of the occupation of Germany, Bradley chronicles the collapse of a nation physically destroyed by hubris and a war that changed the face of Europe
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