Sunday, March 10, 2019

Review: Call Me No Hero: Two Ordinary Boys and a Tale of Honor and Valor

Call Me No Hero: Two Ordinary Boys and a Tale of Honor and Valor Call Me No Hero: Two Ordinary Boys and a Tale of Honor and Valor by R.A. Sheats
My rating: 0 of 5 stars

MWSA Review

I was beginning to think that everybody had forgotten me." Ernest Thomas, affectionately called Boots because of his love for the footwear, wrote to his beloved mother in a letter dated November 19, 1941.

Call Me No Hero shines a light on a very important part of American history: World War II and the unsung American heroes that are so easily forgotten, simply because they were born and raised in small-town America. The protagonists, Jim Sledge and Boots, were two young men whose friendship proved to overcome and defeat barriers and time, and who chose to be selfless and serve their country with pride and honor.

From rural Florida, all the way to raising a flag on the volcanic shores of Iwo Jima, Boots' dreams came to an abrupt and irreversible halt when he was killed in action. A heartbreaking telegram revealed the news to his mother, who had lovingly sent him countless letters (and candy!) to remind her darling son just how much he meant to her.

The book, filled with photos, letters, maps, and journal excerpts, does a very good job at bringing back to life a story that, had it not been for Boots' best friend Jim Sledge, as well as the author of the book, R. A. Sheats, would have probably been lost to history amnesia.

And so, to conclude, let's take our hats off, look up at the American flag, and with a smile on our faces, let's reassure Ernest "Boots" Thomas: No, darling son, we haven't forgotten about you!

Review by Brunella Costagliala (March 2019)

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