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In “Blankenship,” written in 1953, Styron draws on his stint as a guard at a stateside military prison at the end of World War II. “Marriott, the Marine” and “The Suicide Run”–which Styron composed in the early 1970s as part of an intended novel that he set aside to write Sophie’s Choice–depict the surreal experience of being conscripted a second time, after World War II, to serve in the Korean War. “My Father’s House” captures the isolation and frustration of a soldier trying to become a civilian again. In “Elobey, Annobón, and Corisco,” written late in Styron’s life, a soldier attempts to exorcise the dread of an approaching battle by daydreaming about far-off islands, visited vicariously through his childhood stamp collection.
Perhaps the last volume from one of literature’s greatest voices, The Suicide Run brings to life the drama, inhumanity, absurdity, and heroism that forever changed the men who served in the Marine Corps.
- William Styron - Author
- Mark Deakins - Narrator
OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781415966372
- File size: 157876 KB
- Release date: October 6, 2009
- Duration: 05:28:54
MP3 audiobook
- ISBN: 9781415966372
- File size: 158074 KB
- Release date: October 6, 2009
- Duration: 05:28:54
- Number of parts: 5
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
MP3 audiobook
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English