Warning of War: A Novel of the North China Marines

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Macmillan, 2003 - Fiction - 352 pages

The New York Times Bestselling Author of The Marines of Autumn

Late November of 1941.

Half the world is at war and with the other half about to join in, a thousand U.S. Marines stand sentinel over the last days of an uneasy truce between ourselves and the Imperial Japanese Army in chaotic North China.

By November 27, FDR is convinced Japan is about to launch a military action. Washington doesn't know where, isn't sure precisely when. But the Cabinet is sufficiently alarmed that War Secretary Henry Stimson and Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox are authorized to send an immediate and coded "warning of war" to American bases and units in harm's way.

In Shanghai two cruise ships are chartered and 800 armed American Marines are marched through the great port city with enormous pomp and circumstance and embarked for Manila.

Another 200 Marines, unable to reach Shanghai, and serving in small garrisons and posts from Peking to Mongolia and the Gobi Desert, are caught short by this "warning of war".

This is their story. Of how a detachment of American Marines marooned in North China as war erupts, set out on an epic march through hostile territory in an attempt to fight their way out of China and, somehow, rejoin their Corps for the war against Japan.

James Brady dazzles us once again with a stunning and unflinching look at America at war. Warning of War is a moving tribute to sheer courage, determination, and Marine Corps discipline, and is a wonderful celebration of America in one of its darkest but finest hours.

 

Selected pages

Contents

III
1
IV
7
V
14
VI
17
VII
20
VIII
24
IX
28
X
31
XXXIV
159
XXXV
167
XXXVI
173
XXXVII
178
XXXVIII
182
XXXIX
187
XL
191
XLI
195

XI
36
XII
41
XIII
46
XIV
51
XV
57
XVI
64
XVII
75
XVIII
79
XIX
85
XX
91
XXI
93
XXII
99
XXIII
104
XXIV
107
XXV
114
XXVI
119
XXVII
123
XXVIII
128
XXIX
135
XXX
140
XXXI
145
XXXII
151
XXXIII
155
XLII
197
XLIII
203
XLIV
208
XLV
213
XLVI
219
XLVII
225
XLVIII
236
XLIX
244
L
249
LI
255
LII
260
LIII
268
LIV
273
LV
279
LVI
283
LVII
289
LVIII
297
LIX
301
LX
306
LXI
313
LXII
320
LXIII
330
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About the author (2003)

Journalist and author James Brady was born in Brooklyn, New York on November 15, 1928. He graduated from Manhattan College in 1950. During the Korean War, he served in the Marine Corps and was awarded the Bronze Star with Combat V for a firefight against the Chinese army on May 31, 1952 in November 2001. He held numerous jobs in journalism including the publisher of Women's Wear Daily from 1964 to 1971 and writer of the celebrity profile column In Step With for Parade magazine for almost 25 years. He also wrote numerous fiction and nonfiction works including The Coldest War (1990), Further Lane (1997), The Marines of Autumn (2000), The Scariest Place in the World: A Marine Returns to North Korea (2005), and Why Marines Fight (2007). He died on January 26, 2009 at the age of 80.

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