This was often a tough read. I picked this up in the first instance because while I had a general knowledge of the 29th Infantry Division's experiences on Omaha Beach and into Normandy, it was not a detailed knowledge. In the second instance, my Vietnam era service was in the National Guard, specifically, in the 1st Battalion, 115th Infantry Regiment - aka in previous incarnation as "the clay pigeons of St. Lo" - so though separated by a generation and multiple decades, I was reading about my guys so to speak. Glover S. Johns, Jr, was back then Major Johns, the battalion commander, and while he writes this in the third person, the book is his personal memoir from the time he replaced the battalion commander who had brought the 1st Battalion ashore until the battalion secured the town of St. Lo many hard days later. The story is told mostly in a matter of fact manner though not without emotion as he recounts the effect of casualties and loss personally and on the battalion. I think one could safely say that given the casualty rates among both the original members and their replacements, the battalion that occupied St Lo was not the battalion that crossed Omaha Beach on June 6. No attempt is made to conceal the sometimes naive approach of the battalion's members to fighting the Germans, nor costly learning process that the battalion experiences in this campaign. For the reader not schooled on the US Army of the period. There is an appendix that describes the organization and equipment (including arms) of an infantry battalion as well as a glossary of the military terms that appear in the book.