Bill Mauldin: A Life Up Front by Todd DePastino

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(Hardcover)

  • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
  • Pub. Date: February 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780393061833
  • Sales Rank: 48,025
  • 320pp
 
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The Barnes & Noble Review

Back at the beginning of this century, someone asked historian Stephen Ambrose to name his candidate for Time magazine's Person of the 20th Century. Without hesitation, he chose "the citizen soldier" -- the enlisted men of the Second World War about whom he wrote in one of his many popular books. No doubt Bill Mauldin -- cartoonist, World War II veteran, and the subject of Todd DePastino's excellent new biography -- would agree with Ambrose's salute to the average G.I. Joe. After all, Mauldin (1921-2003) was essential in creating the very image. His cartoons from the front, published in the service newspapers and reprinted throughout the United States, went far toward explaining the life of the average soldier to his supporters back home. Mauldin himself came from a hardscrabble background similar to many of those men who were sent to the frontline of combat, and his sympathies ran deep, not just because he was a low-level infantryman.

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Synopsis

The definitive biography of the greatest cartoonist of the Greatest Generation.

"The real war," said Walt Whitman, "will never get in the books." During World War II, the truest glimpse most Americans got of the "real war" came through the flashing black lines of twenty-two-year-old infantry sergeant Bill Mauldin. Week after week, Mauldin defied army censors, German artillery, and Patton's pledge to "throw his ass in jail" to deliver his wildly popular cartoon, "Up Front," to the pages of Stars and Stripes. "Up Front" featured the wise-cracking Willie and Joe, whose stooped shoulders, mud-soaked uniforms, and pidgin of army slang and slum dialect bore eloquent witness to the world of combat and the men who lived—and died—in it.

This taut, lushly illustrated biography—the first of two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Bill Mauldin—is illustrated with more than ninety classic Mauldin cartoons and rare photographs. It traces the improbable career and tumultuous private life of a charismatic genius who rose to fame on his motto: "If it's big, hit it." 92 illustrations.

Publishers Weekly

Historian DePastino (Citizen Hobo) eloquently memorializes cartoonist Bill Mauldin, who won fame as "the leading spokesman for the American combat soldier" during World War II, in this authoritative biography. Mauldin (1921-2003) grew up in Depression-era New Mexico in a dysfunctional family. After studying at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts for one year, he joined the newly mobilized 45th Infantry Division of the Arizona National Guard. Mauldin then became the 45th Division News's cartoonist. Deployed to North Africa in 1943, Mauldin participated in the invasions of Sicily and Italy. In 1944, while on staff at the GI newspaper Stars and Stripes, Mauldin created his signature characters, the weary and disheveled infantrymen Willie and Joe. Willie and Joe became soldiers' heroes and anathema to brass such as Gen. George Patton, who threatened to throw Mauldin in jail for his characters' indolence. After the war, Mauldin published bestselling cartoon collections, worked briefly as an actor, ran unsuccessfully for Congress and ended his career with two Pulitzer Prizes for editorial cartooning. Thoroughly researched and sprightly written, DePastino's balanced biography is a solid introduction to an American original. Classic Mauldin cartoons are an entertaining bonus. (Feb.)

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Biography

Todd DePastino is the author of Citizen Hobo: How a Century of Homelessness Shaped America and the general editor of the cartoon collection Willie & Joe: The WWII Years (Fantagraphics). He teaches at Waynesburg College and lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

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