Globe Pequot / Lyons Press
Pages: 320
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4930-1736-2 • Hardback • November 2015 • $26.95 • (£20.99)
978-1-4930-1737-9 • eBook • November 2015 • $25.50 • (£19.99)
Gregory Archer is the maternal grandson of Private Ralph Heller, the diarist and protagonist of the book. He is a licensed clinical psychologist and the author of various books and articles in the field of psychology. He also has a website dedicated to his grandfather’s experiences in World War I (www.drgregoryarcher.com), including all the interesting stories and photographs that have been extrapolated from Private Heller’s diary. He lives in Fountain Hills, Arizona.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prologue:The Guns of June--00
Chapter 1:Count Me In!--00
Chapter 2:Move out, Lobsters!--00
Chapter 3:Those Devious Huns--00
Chapter 4:Where’s the Stupid War?--00
Chapter 5:Where the Hell are We?--00
Chapter 6:Pray Like You Mean it--00
Chapter 7: Holy Shit!--00
Chapter 8:The Breast of Paris--00
Chapter 9:For One Night the Killing Stopped--00
Chapter 10: Screwed, Blued and Tattooed--00
Chapter 11:Springtime Slaughter--00
Chapter 12:A Time to Die--00
Chapter 13: I’m Not Going to Make It--00
Chapter 14:All Dead on the Western Front--00
Chapter 15:From Hell and Back--00
War Statistics/ Quote from On Killing—00
Poem/Providence—00
The Author--00
Appendix (Names of the Battle Creek Boys)—00
Acknowledgments--00
Ambulance Corps Service World War I Memorial, Allentown, PA--00
“An intriguing – and highly accurate - story about one the most important members of any combat team – the medic. For the injured, there is none more vital to survival. I recommend Private Heller to anyone with any interest in military operations.”--R. T. Browning, Brigadier General, USAF (Retired)
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“Private Heller and the Bantam Boys is thought provoking, entertaining, educational, engaging and a reminder that, like now, war is hell. It is through the action of men like Ralph and the Bantam Boys that the Red Cross today still commands such a high level of respect.”—Kathryn Forbes, Chairman Audit and Risk Committee International Federation of the Red Cross Red Crescent
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“Private Heller is an open door to the past. The words in Ralph Heller’s tattered and war torn journal spring to life, telling his life and death story of survival on the Western Front. From the comedy of learning to drive ambulances, to the devastation and heartbreak of losing friends in combat, this book delivers an up-close personal view of Private Heller’s experience as an ambulance driver during WWI.”--David L. O’Neal, WWI Preservation Collection, Military Historical Studies
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"From the comic to the horrific, Private Heller and the Bantam Boys will touch readers of all ages!"
— The AMEDD Historian