ISBN-13: 9781533005212 / Angielski / Miękka / 2016 / 140 str.
ISBN-13: 9781533005212 / Angielski / Miękka / 2016 / 140 str.
We've all heard stories about "the Greatest Generation," brave WW2 heroes who fought our enemies to save Europe from Hitler, and Asia from Hirohito. But here's a DIFFERENT story-- about a WW2 soldier who was really a misfit. He fought more American soldiers than he did the enemy. He enjoyed breaking the rules, exploring off limits (including enemy territory), going AWOL, and embarrassing those in authority. He was almost killed dozens of times, usually by his own crazy actions. But there was also a different Dann, one who loved animals and had a great sense of humor. He witnessed such awe inspiring natural beauty and encountered so many unusual people doing extraordinary things, that his true story could tell several books. He began as an abandoned child growing up in Colorado, then California, and Texas. He became an actual cowboy, helping tame the last of the wild west. He volunteered for service with the Marines after Pearl Harbor. He was shipped off to the other side of the world and saw Asia collide with modern warfare and Western culture. All his struggles eventually led him to help others who experienced hardships and transformed him into "Cowboy" Chaplain Dann-- a volunteer minister for the most hated places in America (our prisons). Dann is not a hero. (At least he doesn't think so). But he lived a remarkable life, traveling amazing places during momentous times with an incredible cast of characters. He remembers it all with the homespun charm of a real cowboy who has seen our world change in ways most us never even considered. This book is really about an average person in exceptional circumstances. Dann's story will take readers back nearly a century to observe-- through the eyes of a rugged cowboy turned soldier-- America's hardest, yet happiest years. At over 90 years of age, Dann really has "seen it all"-- and he wants to share the highlights of a world that no longer exists, except in the memories of some very lucky survivors.