| Location |
RHC |
| Item Call Number |
D 767.4 .M37 J65 2007 |
| Status |
Available |
| Barcode |
18504 |
| International Standard Book Number |
- International Standard Book Number - 9780425215661 (hardbound)
|
| Library Of Congress Call Number |
- Classification number - D 767.4 .M37
- Item number - J65 2007
|
| Main Entry |
- Personal name - Johnson, Forrest Bryant
|
| Title Statement |
- Title - Phantom warrior :
- Remainder of title - the heroic true story of Pvt. John McKinney's one-man stand against the Japanese in World War II /
- Statement of responsibility, etc. - Forrest Bryant Johnson
|
| Publication, Distribution, Etc. (imprint) |
- Place of publication, distribution, etc. - New York
- Name of publisher, distributor, etc. - Berkley Caliber
- Date of publication, distribution, etc. - c2007
|
| Physical Description |
- Extent - 340 pages
- Other physical details - some illustrations, maps
- Dimensions - 24 cm
|
| Content Type |
|
| Media Type |
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| Carrier Type |
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| Bibliography, Etc. Note |
- Bibliography, etc - Includes bibliographical references and index
|
| Summary, Etc. |
- Summary, etc. - "On a small island in the pacific, in an almost unknown battle of World War II, one quiet, unassuming American country boy exemplified courage and sacrifice beyond the call of duty. John McKinney never intended to become a soldier. The son of a poor Georgia sharecropper, he left school in the third grade and never returned. Instead, he found his place in the wilderness, using his expertise in hunting and fishing to feed his Depression-era family. Then he was drafted to serve his country in World War II. Assigned to a company bound for the Pacific, McKinney slogged through hard fighting in New Guinea and the Philippines, earning a reputation as an amiable country boy who knew how to survive. But in the predawn hours of May 11, 1945, just as Private McKinney retired from guarding his unit's encampment of Dingalan Bay on the Philippine island of Luzon, hell came calling. An elite strike force of Japanese Imperial troopers attacked, taking the camp by surprise. McKinney returned fire from his foxhole, standing alone against wave after wave of fanatical Japanese soldiers as grenades and mortars exploded around him. When he ran out of bullets, he swung his rifle as a club. When his rifle broke, he switched to his knife. When his knife dropped, he used his fists. At the end of the bloody, shocking battle, John McKinney stood--his uniform shredded to ribbons, but with only a small head wound. Before him were the bodies of more than one hundred Japanese he had killed single-handedly. This is the story of an extraordinary man whose courage and fortitude in battle saved many American lives and earned him the Congressional Medal of Honor, and whose legacy has been sadly forgotten by all but a few. here, in these pages, the proud legacy of John McKinney lives on."
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| Language Note |
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| Subject Personal Name |
- Personal name - McKiney, John R.
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| Subject Topical Term |
- Topical term or geographic name as entry element - World War, 1935-1945
- General subdivision - Campaigns
- Geographic subdivision - Luzon.
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| Index Termuncontrolled |
- Uncontrolled term - United States. Army. Infantry Division, 33rd
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