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Biography & Memoir

A Boy's War by Paxton Davis

A Boy's War
Paxton Davis

John F. Blair, Publisher
978-0-89587-169-5
$8.95 paperback
5 x 7
269 pages
Published in 1990
Bio/Memoir

The rumblings of war are ominous as A Boy's War begins. Davis's story begins as he enters his harrowing "Rat year" at Virginia Military Institute--not to prepare for war, but simply to continue a tradition among Davis men. But the army soon beckons. Davis's early experiences with wartime bureaucracy include the degradations of mass physical examinations, the rigors of basic training, and the infernal boredom, where "Hurry up and wait" is the ruling maxim.

Picked for the medics, Davis describes his odyssey through a series of camps, his introduction to the ways of the world in Juarez, Mexico, his needlessly secretive, tortuous journey by troopship to India, then across India by train, as he and his fellow soldiers are confined in close quarters for forty-five days without a bath; his stay at his final destination, Burma, and his unit's final assignment to carry out the oppressive task of disinterring the remains of American soldiers.

A Boy's War relates one writer's experience of how luck, fatigue, and fear played leading roles in determining soldiers' fates during a war fought mostly by boys, many of whom like Davis learned far more than they cared to about life and death before reaching voting age.

Reviews

“Two years ago Paxton Davis gave us Being a Boy, a personal recollection of his adolescence in North Carolina during the 1920s and 1930s. Now he's back, and he takes us through his World War II experience, from being drafted out of the Virginia Military Institute, to training as a medic in Texas, to fighting in the jungles of Burma. When his furlough finally comes, he is just turning 21. Like the memoir of his formative years, his war story is full of a certain naive honesty and the ability to look at his own innocence. Recommended for popular reading collections.”
—Library Journal

“This memoir of an 18-year-old kid from North Carolina who is drafted after one year of college and sent to Burma is a fascinating account of his army life. The daily boredom and intermittent activity, combined with Davis's chronicling of his training and the men he worked with, make for entertaining and touching reading. Those who shared the World War II experience are diminishing in number, which makes accounts like this all the more valuable.”
—Amazon.com reviewer

Links

Also by Paxton Davis:
Being a Boy
A Boy No More