Join Books.org — it's free

United States History - 20th Century - Wars & Conflict, Italian History, United States Armed Forces, World War II, Aviation - Military
Combat Jump by Ed Ruggero — book cover

Combat Jump

by Ed Ruggero
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Combat Jump is the exciting story of valiant ⢩tizen soldiers⟷ho risked their lives during the dramatic paratrooper invasion of Sicily in July 1943 that set the stage for the ground troop invasion of Fortress Europe.

The hair–raising, frontline account of the first American airborne invasion of World War II and of the young paratroopers who risked their lives for freedom.

By 1943, the war in Europe had reached a turning point. General Dwight Eisenhower was given orders to invade Sicily and head north. To achieve this, Ike had a new weapon: U.S. paratroopers. Their mission was to seize the approaches to the invasion beaches and to hold off German attacks.

Combat Jump tells the little–known story of these paratroopers and how they changed the American way of war. It takes readers on their journey from civilians to citizen soldiers, through training in the United States and later in North Africa, and then shows their daring jump into the darkness over enemy–held Sicily.

By first light on D–day, July 10, 1943, it looked as if the mission would fail. Inexperienced pilots, lost or blown off course, dropped 80 percent of the troopers from one to sixty–fice miles from their targets. The American commander, James Gavin, landed so far from his objective that he was not even sure he was in Sicily. Arthur Gorham, commanding 500 men of the First Battalion, encountered two surprises when the sun came up. He and just over 100 of his men were the only GIs–out of 3,400 dropped–near their objective.

He discovered that the Germans on Sicily had tanks. The lightly armed paratroopers, with their rifles and hand grenades, were not equipped to take on the forty–ton panzers. But against all odds, they did. The costly lessons they learned shaped the war in Europe, for without Sicily, there might have been no airborne invasion of France in June 1944.

Combat Jump recounts the extraordinary contributions these young men made when their country called them to war, and it tells a classic tale of military action and remarkable courage.

About the Author, Ed Ruggero

Ed Ruggero is the author of Combat Jump: The Young Men Who Led the Assault into Fortress Europe, July 1943 and Duty First: A Year in the Life of West Point and the Making of American Leaders. He was an infantry officer in the United States Army for eleven years and is an experienced keynote speaker on leadership development. He lives in Wallingford, Pennsylvania.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Library Journal

It takes a special type of soldier to jump from a perfectly good airplane, even more so those young men who joined the first Airborne units during World War II. Ruggero, author of The Making of American Leaders and five military novels, uses extensive interviews to weave the personal lives of the first Airborne soldiers into the account of their first combat jump in 1943 into Sicily just prior to the Allied invasion. Combat Jump follows the men of the 505th Airborne Regiment from their induction, training, and finally their heroic actions on the island of Sicily. Ruggero writes a realistic story portraying not only the men's fears but, more important, their actions, which were based on hard training. He also recounts the arguments that ensued after the mission and the ultimate official decision to keep and use Airborne troops in the future based largely on their success in Sicily. Well written and flowing like a good novel, this book is highly recommended for larger public and academic libraries.-Lt. Col. Charles M. Minyard (ret.), U.S. Army, Blountstown, FL Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A former infantryman compiles, from interviews with survivors, the story of the first major US airborne action of WWII. Stalin wanted a second front; Churchill agreed and sold Roosevelt on it. Skip down a few steps in the command chain and find Lt. Col. James Gavin and 3,400 men of the 505th Regimental Combat Team headed across the Mediterranean to Sicily in C-47s. Jumping at night for the first time in combat from low-flying planes under fire, wandering far from their drop-zones, the 505th hit concrete-like hillsides and sun-dried furrows waiting in the dark to snap ankles or legs like twigs. The mission of this advance unit was to keep German and Italian defenders from counterattacking the most massive Allied landing force yet assembled on its beachheads. With little in the way of ground cover, save gullies, streambeds, vineyards, and farmers’ fences crafted from cactus rows, pockets of widely scattered paratroops who could still walk or hobble proceeded to "attack the enemy wherever he could be found." The big surprise: German armor, which all had been assured would not be found on the island, was—including massive, nearly unstoppable Tiger Tanks. (Allied high command, it turns out, knew very well they were there; it was decided to withhold the knowledge from Gavin on down to guard a secret British decryption method that had obtained it.) The operation wound up being judged a marginal success (with Eisenhower dissenting) due to the bravado of small units who harried German defenders and caused them to seriously overestimate Allied strength. (Gavin would later become the youngest two-star Army general since the Civil War.) Three bloody days of courage and confusion, both elementsfaithfully reflected with frustratingly minimal overview, from Ruggero (Duty First, 2001, etc.). Agent: Matt Bialer/Trident Media

Los Angeles Times

“A master of the World War II genre.”

Denver Post

“Ruggero is a first-rate storyteller, abetted by the vivid memories of the soldiers who lived through it.”

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2003
Publisher
New York : HarperCollins, c2003.
Pages
388
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780060088750

More by Ed Ruggero

Similar books