Losing the War Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Losing the War Losing the War by Lee Sandlin
140 ratings, 4.63 average rating, 25 reviews
Losing the War Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“War ends at the moment when peace permanently wins out. Not when the articles of surrender are signed or the last shot is fired, but when the last shout of a sidewalk battle fades, when the next generation starts to wonder whether the whole thing ever really happened. World War II ended as war always ends -- by trailing off into nothingness and doubt. Its final monument has never been seen by mortal eyes. It's a phantom image at the edge of a rumor: an unmarked grave in the depths of the South American jungle where a weird and decrepit old man, half forgotten by the world, at last entered the lists of oblivion.”
Lee Sandlin, Losing the War
“But it seems somehow paltry and wrong to call what happened at Midway a "battle." It had nothing to do with battles the way they were pictured in the popular imagination. There were no last-gasp gestures of transcendent heroism, no brilliant counterstrategies that saved the day. It was more like an industrial accident. It was a clash not between armies, but between TNT and ignited petroleum and drop-forged steel. The thousands who died there weren't warriors but bystanders -- the workers at the factory who happened to draw the shift when the boiler exploded.”
Lee Sandlin, Losing the War
tags: war
“Oblivion has always been the most trustworthy guardian of classified files.”
Lee Sandlin, Losing the War