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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: S L Kelley , James Quinton KelleyPublisher: Outstanding Literature Publishers LLC Imprint: Outstanding Literature Publishers LLC Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.957kg ISBN: 9781640773226ISBN 10: 1640773223 Pages: 664 Publication Date: 22 September 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThis biography of hard times and sacrifice earns its place alongside the works of great Americana storytelling. - Chanticleer Reviews Review by Barbara Bamberger Scott: World War II veteran Quinton Kelley recounted his life story to an avid biographer - his daughter, S. L. Kelley, a documentarian and award-winning video producer. Kelley's tale begins in Coker Creek, Tennessee, where he was raised on an 80-acre farm, in a log cabin that he described as rough, but brightened with flowers. Taught to be honest and hardworking by his parents, he grew up with kerosene lamps for light, a fireplace for warmth and a woodstove for cooking. His recollections are colorful, with language that recalls his roots. As a boy, he wore shoes only to church or to town and attended a church that doubled as a one-room schoolhouse. Everyone in the region knew someone who made moonshine, a scruffy bunch, Kelley called them; the local country store had bullet holes in the walls from fights between that bunch and the storekeeper. In his teens, he began work away from the farm, first for a local gold prospector, then for the TVA. Then in 1940 he heard about World War II and knew he'd be drafted. The second part of the book shows Kelley leaving Coker Creek for Camp Beale, California, where he became the company carpenter. Assigned to an armored division, the former farm boy showed his worth as the only member of his group who did not need the training to drive a tank. He met fellow recruits from all over America, and despite the manly joshing and rough language among them, the boys in his platoon once generously gave him money to get home when his sister was dangerously ill. He drove into combat, first in France, then in Germany, as part of an initiative that ultimately saw the end of Hitler's Third Reich. Kelley (who passed away before the publication of his memoir) did not glorify himself in recounting his war exploits, but vividly described what it's like to sit in a tank, looking at the action through a tiny window, always in danger of being killed while trapped inside the metal box. There's not much room, he opined, for mistakes in battle. In his Tennessee argot, he states that combat made me a bit jubrous. Still a homeboy at heart, courting a girl by mail, Kelley noted that French and German people were good farmers, though still using horses, and very orderly in their houses and fields. Camped near Berchtesgaden after victory, he refused to go see Hitler's former hangout: I didn't want to waste a minute on that sorry ol' scudder. Once back in the US, marriage to his sweetheart soon followed. Two books in one, this substantial memoir can be read equally avidly by nostalgic southern and mountain folk as a wide-ranging recreation of simpler times, or by anyone who is drawn to tales of war - both the battles and the long days and hours waiting and watching for the next conflict - as seen up close and personal. Using her writer's instinct and flair, S.L. Kelley has done a remarkable job of combining her father's spoken words, his accent and slant, with those of fellow combatants and other war watchers. Her book would make a splendid gift for old-timers, and a wholesome educational read for younger generations who would do well to remember and revere the sacrifices of America's soldiers. Author InformationAt times adventurer, explorer, journalist, and documentarian, S. L. Kelley is also a multi award-winning video producer and writer. Her assignments and research have taken her to some of the most remote and extreme places around the world. She's documented treasure hunting high in the Andes Mountains, explored a lost city with archaeologists in the Arabian Desert, and searched for shrunken heads in the Amazon Jungle. Her later work has focused on her home country and includes video interviews with some of America's remaining World War II veterans. The real-life characters and experiences in Hillbillies to Heroes are centered around the story's narrator, James Quinton Kelley, the father of this as-told-to memoir's author, S. L. Kelley. She interviewed him extensively over many years to capture a portrait of this remarkable man using his own words, set in American history. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |