From Calcutta with Love: The World War II Letters of Richard and Reva BeardTexas Tech University Press, 2002 - 352 Seiten The saga of China, Burma, India--World War II's forgotten theater--is as heroic as it is seldom told. CBI ground troops were charged with the Herculean task of carving a road from India to China through humid jungles where disease was as great a hazard as the Japanese, and pilots who "flew the Hump," the treacherous flight route over the Himalayas, braved violent monsoon rains, deadly wind shifts, and mountainsides that suddenly loomed from the clouds.Richard Beard, an Army psychologist assigned to the 142nd General Hospital in Calcutta, dealt daily with emotional trauma. While American and British soldiers hacked their way through dense tropical forests to build the supply route, Beard immersed himself in the internal jungles of those he treated.A pillar to the men he served, Beard was an astute listener and observer, pleased to be playing his part. But his own pillar was his wife, Reva, teaching school half a world away in Findlay, Ohio. In daily letters to Reva, he poured out not only his observations of life in India but also his own longing and passions, and the unfolding drama of war, in painfully exquisite detail tempered with tenderness and humor. Reva's return letters are filled with news of the home front and stories of her young students, but through them all courses a longing for Richard's safe return.In these letters the couple's devotion to each other in the face of separation and their willingness to see the war through to its end demonstrate once again the dedication of the World War II generation. |
Inhalt
A Letter from the Editor | 1 |
The ChinaBurmaIndia Theater and My Father Richard 9 | 9 |
Epilogue | 309 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
afternoon American army arrived asked Beard boys Burma Calcutta called China close club coming course Darling Dearest Dearest Ritter decided Dick don't doubt dreams feel finally forces four gave getting girl give Goodnight hand hear hope hospital hour India interesting Japanese keep kisses learned leave letters living look Merrill's Marauders mind Miss months morning mother move never nice night officer played pretty rain reason received Reva Richard Ritter Road seems sent September served ship sleep soldiers soon sound started stay sure sweet sweetheart talk tell theater things thought told tomorrow tonight took train turned usual waiting ward week wife wish wonderful World writing wrote