Frontline General: Douglas MacArthur: America's Most Controversial Hero
By (Author) Jules Archer
Foreword by Iain C. Martin
Skyhorse Publishing
Sky Pony Press
10th January 2017
United States
Children
Non Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Places and peoples
Childrens / Teenage general interest: History and the past
Childrens / Teenage social topics: War and conflict issues
355.0092
Hardback
208
Width 140mm, Height 210mm, Spine 18mm
347g
At twenty-six, Douglas MacArthur was military aide to President Theodore Roosevelt. His courageous leadership of the Rainbow Division during World War I made him a general. At the same time, his reluctance to heed any authority but his own gained him a reputation of arrogance and insubordination that was to shadow his entire career.
As MacArthur helped guide a defeated Japan to democracy, it was remarked that he himself tolerated no democratic questioning of his commands. When he was summoned from Japan to take command of the desperately beleaguered forces in Korea, the conflict between duty and pride brought his career to a dramatic conclusion. With brilliant generalship he saved his army from defeat, only to be removed from his post when he refused to obey the president himself. Douglas MacArthurs deeds were of heroic proportion, but he is, and will continue to be, one of Americas most controversial figures.
Jules Archer was one of the most respected names in nonfiction for young people. During his lifetime he published more than seventy books, which have been translated into twelve languages throughout the world. He lived in Scotts Valley, California, until his death in 2008.
Iain C. Martin is a freelance writer and historian with an MA in American history from Southern Connecticut State University. Originally from Owego, New York, he now resides in Clinton, Connecticut, with his wife and two children.