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Devotion

An Epic Story of Heroism, Brotherhood and Sacrifice

Audiobook
53 of 53 copies available
53 of 53 copies available
***SOON TO BE A MAJOR HOLLYWOOD FILM***
'This is aerial drama at its best. Fast, powerful, and moving.' Erik Larson
'A must read.' New York Post
Devotion is the gripping story of the US Navy's most famous aviator duo – Tom Hudner, a white, blue-blooded New Englander, and Jesse Brown, a black sharecropper's son from Mississippi. Against all odds, Jesse beat back racism to become the Navy's first black aviator. Against all expectations, Tom passed up a free ride at Harvard to fly fighter planes for his country. Barely a year after President Truman ordered the desegregation of the military, the two became wingmen in Fighter Squadron 32 and went on to fight side-by-side in the Korean War.
In an enthralling narrative, Adam Makos follows Tom and Jesse's journey to the war's climatic battle at the Chosin Reservoir, where they flew headlong into waves of troops in order to defend an entire division of Marines trapped on a frozen lake. It was here that one of them was faced with an unthinkable choice – and discovered how far they would go to save a friend.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 3, 2015
      Journalist Makos follows 2012’s A Higher Call with another true story of heroic actions by wartime pilots, told in a flamboyant and slightly overwrought style. This time the conflict is the Korean War and Makos’s tale centers on the first African-American U.S. Navy carrier pilot, Jesse Brown, who died in action even though fellow pilot Tom Hudner, an upper-class son of a New England grocery store magnate, led selfless actions to try to save his life. “There has been no finer act of unselfish heroism in military history,” Hudner’s commanding officer later said of his courageous attempt to save Brown. The story is told mainly through the voices of the men who took part in the action; Makos and his staff conducted many interviews to use as sources. The overabundant use of reconstructed dialogue—some of which barely rings true—gives the book the feel of an adventure novel. The entire package seems to be an attempt to tell a screenplay-ready, Greatest Generation tale similar to Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken. Makos tells a good story, but it’s not at Hillenbrand’s level. Agent: David Vigliano, AGI-Vigliano Literary.

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  • English

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