SEVENTY-EIGHT MILES
A Novel of the Chosin Reservoir
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
November 1950. The Chosin Reservoir. The temperature is thirty below zero. The Chinese have sent 120,000 soldiers to kill them. The road south is seventy-eight miles long.
Corporal Oren Lockhart counts everything. Rounds. Steps. Seconds between mortar impacts. Men still breathing after a firefight. He has been counting since Okinawa, since a hillside covered in bodies taught him that numbers are easier than feelings. For seven years, the counting has kept him alive. It has also kept him empty.
Then a nineteen-year-old kid from Omaha named Fisk starts talking about a girl. He talks about her the way some men talk about God — with total conviction and no evidence that the faith is returned. He carries eleven unsent letters in his breast pocket. He has a chipped front tooth and a grin that won't quit. He is everything Lockhart is not: open, afraid, and fully alive.
When the trap closes and the 1st Marine Division is surrounded, Lockhart makes a decision he cannot put into words. This kid walks out. Not for the Corps. Not for the country. For a girl in Omaha and a stack of letters that haven't been mailed.
What follows is a fourteen-day, seventy-eight-mile march through the worst terrain and the worst cold and the worst odds in American military history. A sergeant with an infected arm who refuses to stop walking. A Navy corpsman who talks about his mother's recipes while he stitches men together. A Chinese colonel on the ridgeline who studies the Marines the way a teacher studies students. A bridge that mathematics says should fail. A column of men who keep walking because walking is the only thing left.
And a man who has spent seven years counting the dead — who must now learn to count the living.
From the frozen mountains of North Korea to a church basement in Omaha, Seventy-Eight Miles is a novel about war, endurance, and the slow, hard return to being human.
For readers of The Things They Carried, Matterhorn, and On Desperate Ground.