000 01639nam a2200193 a 4500
001 021453
005 20231009192451.0
008 130604t2005----nyu-----------000-u-eng-u
020 _a9780374184216
082 0 _aFIC TUR
100 1 _aTurow, Scott
245 1 0 _aOrdinary heroes
_c/ Scott Turow
260 _aNew York
_b: Farrar, Straus Giroux
_c, c2005.
300 _a371 p.
_c; 25 cm.
520 _aMoving away from legal thrillers (Reversible Errors) and nonfiction (Ultimate Punishment), Turow has penned a searing story of World War II interwoven with a personal family drama. Stewart Dubinsky is not especially close to his father, David Dubin. Even their names are different, yet David's death prompts Stewart to try and find out more about this enigmatic man. He uncovers some startling information: that his father was engaged to another woman before his mother, and that he was court-martialed during the Battle of the Bulge. Dubinsky decides to write a family history, starts digging, and uncovers a manuscript his father wrote about his war experiences that is alternately moving and horrifying, vindicating, and vilifying and shines light on a side of his parents that he never knew. While some of the historical facts presented are not 100 percent accurate, the book's emotional wallop more than justifies the literary license and should secure its place in the canon of World War II literature. An extraordinary, unforgettable novel, which Turow notes was inspired by his own father's military experiences.
650 _aWorld War, 1939-1945
_x-Veterans
_x-Fiction
650 4 _aFathers and sons
_v--Fiction
942 _cMO
999 _c237977
_d237977