In the Company of Heroes FROM THE PUBLISHER
About the Author
Michael J. Durant retired from the army as a Chief Warrant
Officer 4. In addition to participating in Operation Restore Hope in
Somalia, he saw action in the Persian Gulf, Panama, and Kuwait. His awards
include the Distinguished Service Medal, the Distinguished Flying Cross with
Oak Leaf Cluster, the Bronze Star with Valor Device, the Purple Heart, the
Meritorious Service Medal, three Air Medals, the POW/MIA ribbon, and the
Army Commendation Medal with three Oak Leaf Clusters.
Steven Hartov is a novelist and a respected authority on military matters.
He served in the Israeli Defense Forces Airborne Brigades and a Special
Operations branch of Military Intelligence, and is a regular contributor to
Special Ops-The Journal of Elite Forces.
SYNOPSIS
His battered face appeared on the cover of Time,
Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report to the shock and horror
of all Americans. Black Hawk pilot Mike Durant was shot down and taken
prisoner during America's biggest firefight since the Vietnam War. Published
in the tenth anniversary year of the Somali conflict, this gripping personal
account at last tells the world about Durant's harrowing captivity and the
heroic deeds of his doomed comrades. And, as readers will discover, Durant
proves himself to be nothing less than a hero.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
The 1993 battle in Mogadishu between American soldiers and Somali militiamen gets a human-scale retelling in this jaunty but harrowing memoir. Durant went down with the Black Hawk he piloted; after a terrifying crash in which his back and leg were broken and a violent fire-fight, he was held captive for ten days by Somali militiamen as a pawn in their stand-off with American peacekeeping forces. Frightened and in agony from his wounds, he called on his survival training to help him endure, but he also relied on the empathy of some of his Somali captors, especially the gruff but sympathetic guard who feeds, bathes and bonds with him. Durant is a gung-ho army honcho, not much given to introspection, and the book often takes leave of the captivity narrative to recount his exploits in conflicts from Panama to Iraq, and to celebrate the bravado and leave-no-man-behind esprit-de-corps of his elite "Night Stalkers" helicopter unit. The writing is full of terse jargon, weapons specs, helicopter-assault procedural and special-ops swagger ("They were the kind of professionals who could pick off a rabbit from a roller-coaster with a BB gun"). But overall the story remains taut, and the prose evokes both the chaos of combat and the anxiety of confinement. Durant's perspective on the Somalia conflict is somewhat limited and jingoistic ("Mogadishu was Tombstone, and we were Wyatt Earp"), but his is a revealing portrait of the human face of war. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
Black Hawk pilot Durant recalls his ordeal. Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.
School Library Journal
Adult/High School-A decade ago, Durant and his crew were shot down while flying a U.S. Army Special Operations Black Hawk helicopter in the heart of Mogadishu. The only survivor after a firefight with hostile forces of warlord Mohamed Farah Aidid, the author recounts the conditions of his 11 days in captivity, with experiences that ranged from heroic to gruesome, harrowing, bizarre, and compassionate. Suffering severe injuries to his back, leg, and face, moved under guard through a sequence of rudimentary facilities in a volatile combat environment, and facing the deadly risk of discovery by rival clans, Durant became a political pawn receiving global media attention. Readers of Mark Bowden's Black Hawk Down (Atlantic Monthly, 1999) who wished for a more technically detailed analysis of the mission's operational aspects will savor this account. The book also incorporates chapters on the arduous training required to earn a spot in an elite squadron and lays groundwork for appreciating the Mogadishu engagement by describing prior high-risk special operations in Korea, Panama, and Iraq in which Durant participated. Each episode resonates with the sense of bonding among combat brethren, and the professional esprit and conviction behind mottoes such as "NSDQ" (Night Stalkers Don't Quit), as exemplified by Durant's squadron mates who flew above the embattled city in the days after his shoot-down, broadcasting: "Mike Durant-. We will not leave without you." A dramatic narrative by a talented storyteller.-Lynn Nutwell, Fairfax City Regional Library, VA Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.