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No Ordinary Joes

The Extraordinary True Story of Four Submariners in War and Love and Life

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
On April 23, 1943, the seventy-man crew of the USS Grenadier scrambled to save their submarine—and themselves—after a Japanese aerial torpedo sent it crashing to the ocean floor. Miraculously, the men were able to bring the sub back to the surface, only to be captured by the Japanese.
No Ordinary Joes tells the harrowing story of four of the Grenadier’s crew: Bob Palmer of Medford, Oregon; Chuck Vervalin of Dundee, New York; Tim McCoy of Dallas, Texas; and Gordy Cox of Yakima, Washington. All were enlistees from families that struggled through the Great Depression. The lure of service and duty to country were not their primary motivations—they were more compelled by the promise of a job that provided “three hots and a cot” and a steady paycheck. On the day they were captured, all four were still teenagers.
Together, the men faced unimaginable brutality at the hands of their captors in a prisoner of war camp. With no training in how to respond in the face of relentless interrogations and with less than a cup of rice per day for sustenance, each man created his own strategy for survival. When the liberation finally came, all four anticipated a triumphant homecoming to waiting families, loved ones, and wives, but instead were forced to find a new kind of strength as they struggled to resume their lives in a world that had given them up for dead, and with the aftershocks of an experience that haunted and colored the rest of their days.
Author Larry Colton brings the lives of these four “ordinary” heroes into brilliant focus. Theirs is a story of tragedy and courage, romance and war, loss and endurance, failure and redemption. With a scope both panoramic and disarmingly intimate, No Ordinary Joes is a powerful look at the atrocities of war, the reality of its aftermath, and the restorative power of love.
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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2010

      Four survivors of a World War II Japanese prison camp are the subjects of this gripping story.

      Colton (Counting Coup: A Story of Basketball and Honor on the Little Big Horn, 2000) picks up his subjects at a young age. While they came from different parts of the country and different backgrounds, they had in common impoverished childhoods and were hit hard as the Depression took its toll on their families. Chuck Vervalin, from upstate New York, dreamed of becoming a harness race driver; Bob Palmer, from Oregon, joined the Navy when his girlfriend dropped him after she entered college; Texan Tim McCoy figured the Navy would be easier than the four jobs he was working to support his mother; Canadian-born Gordy Cox, growing up in Washington State, dropped out of school because the work was too hard. All ended up on the U.S.S. Grenadier, a submarine patrolling off Malaya early in the war. Bombed by a Japanese plane, its captain and crew were taken prisoner in April 1943. From then until the end of the war, more than two years later, they were imprisoned, beaten, tortured, starved and forced to work in Japanese factories. Colton tells their stories in unflinching detail, looking at their different survival stragegies. McCoy played the tough guy, even taking on one of the guards in a wrestling match; Cox tried to fade into invisibility. Liberated after the Japanese surrender, they returned to their lives in the United States, looking for a new, normal life. The author follows them for a short time, then jumps to the present day, wrapping up their stories in a final epilogue chapter for each man. All showed signs of what in more recent veterans would have been diagnosed as PTSD, though they would have rejected that term. All had marital troubles, and all were at one point heavily dependent on alcohol. But each of them made it into their 80s with full mental acuity, and Colton has given them a fine last chance to tell their stories.

      A compelling glimpse into forgotten World War II history.

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2010

      Four friends joined the Navy shortly before war broke out. In 1943, their submarine was sunk, and the crew was captured and sent to Japanese labor camps. After more than two years of starvation and torture the four were released yet had to find their way in an America much changed and in the face of a population unwilling to reflect on their problems. Skipping back and forth from sailor to sailor and examining their family struggles both before and after their service, this book will be of most interest to veterans' communities and World War II buffs.

      Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2010
      This meticulously researched and thoroughly well-written book adds much to the literature of the WWII generation. The four menGordon Cox, Tim McCoy, Bob Palmer, and Chuck Vervalinall survived growing up in the Depression. Joining the navy, they all survived the loss of the submarine Grenadier and two and a half years as POWs in Japanese hands. (Their experiences in the camps are told with great balance, if sometimes horrific detail.) Returning home, they lived out somewhat checkered lives, with as many failures as successesdivorces, financial reversals, and alienated or dead children among the latter. The author is frank about their personal quirks, tooall had drinking problems at one time or anotherand pays tribute to the women whose support frequently stood between them and disaster. This is the greatest generation, but with warts, wives, wobbling, and all.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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