The Medic

Life and Death in the Last Days of WWII

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By Leo Litwak

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$11.99

Price

$15.99 CAD

Format

ebook (Digital original)

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ebook (Digital original) $11.99 $15.99 CAD

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around May 1, 2001. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

Leo Litwak was a university student when he joined the Army to fight in World War II, “a na’ve, callow eighteen-year-old son prepared to join other soldier boys being hauled off to war.” In 1944 he found himself in Belgium, in the middle of the waning European war, a medic trained to save lives but often powerless to do much more than watch life slip away. It was hard fighting that took Litwak and his rifle company into the heart of Germany at the close of the war. But Litwak learned there was more to war than fighting, more to understand than maps and ammunition.

In the final months of the war, he watched the men in his company tenderly serve food at a Passover seder for a dozen brutalized Jewish women newly liberated from slavery. He watched those same men torture and execute defenseless German soldiers. He fell in love at the Moulin Rouge in a scene straight out of a Toulouse-Lautrec painting.

The men in his company were dreamers, thieves, friends, killers, revolutionaries, and heroes. They were the men of their time: sometimes brave, sometimes compassionate, sometimes cruel, sometimes loving, usually scared. They were held together by loyalty, only to be scattered by the war’s end. The Medic is the gritty, wise, bighearted, and unflinching account of one man’s quest to find sense in war and its aftermath.

Genre:

On Sale
May 1, 2001
Page Count
240 pages
Publisher
Algonquin Books
ISBN-13
9781565128774

Leo Litwak

Leo Litwak

About the Author

Leo Litwak grew up in Detroit and served in WWII as a medic. He taught English literature at San Francisco State University for more than thirty years and is the author of the novels Waiting for the News, which won the 1970 National Jewish Book Award, and To the Hanging Gardens. His short story "The Eleventh Edition" was awarded first prize in the 1990 edition of Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards.

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