James Brady is the author of Further Lane, Gin Lane, The House That Ate The Hamptons, and The Marines of Autumn.
His weekly columns for Advertising Age and Parade magazines are considered must-reads by millions. He lives in
Manha ttan and in East Hampton, New York.
Review
"War reporting at its best - a graphic depiction, in all its horror, of the war we've almost forgotten...
Jim Brady has used his finely honed reportorial skills to record his own front-line experiences in the Korean War.
His story reads like a novel."
--Walter Cronkite
"A marvelous memoir. A sensitive and superbly written narrative that eventually explodes off the pages like
a grenade in the gut... Taut, tight, and telling. Jim Brady proves again that he is one of the most underrated
writers in American books."
--Dan Rather
"It is about time somebody wrote about the personal side of the Korean War - the forgotten war. It is a gripping
and honest book. Everyone prone to think simply about war should read it."
--Jim Lehrer
St. Martin's Press, LLC Web Site, January, 2004
Summary
America's "forgotten war" lasted just thirty-seven months, yet 54,246 Americans died in that time
-- nearly as many as died in ten years in Vietnam. On the fiftieth anniversary of this devastating conflict, James
Brady tells the story of his life as a young marine lieutenant in Korea.
In 1947, seeking to avoid the draft, nineteen-year-old Jim Brady volunteered for a Marine Corps program that made
him a lieutenant in the reserves on the day he graduated college. He didn't plan to find himself in command of
a rifle platoon three years later facing a real enemy, but that is exactly what happened after the Chinese turned
a so-called police action into a war.
The Coldest War vividly describes Brady's rapid education in the realities of war and the pressures of command.
Opportunities for bold offensives sink in the miasma of trench warfare; death comes in fits and starts as too-accurate
artillery on both sides seeks out men in their bunkers; constant alertness is crucial for survival, while brutal
cold and a seductive silence conspire to lull soldiers into an often fatal stupor.
The Korean War affected the lives of all Americans, yet is little known beyond the antics of "M*A*S*H."
Here is the inside story that deserves to be told, and James Brady is a powerful witness to a vital chapter of
our history.