Dearest Dolly
Love Letters from the Pacific 1945-1946
by
Book Details
About the Book
Review by Russ Lockwood (MagWeb.com)
This collection of "love letters" was taken from a journal radioman Buddy Barnard kept from
Pages 49-67 contain photographs of Buddy and some of the GIs he discusses in the journal, a couple pictures of Dolly, and images of post-war
AuthorHouse.com, a self-publishing outfit, is where you can buy the book. It is also available in hardcover ($13.70).
A journal such as this is an extremely personal, first-person account of the stirrings of post-war duty. It's also perfect for the self-publishing route. You'll learn quite a bit of slang circa 1945, something about what radio operators do, and a bit of peacetime transition. If you're looking for such an angle on Army life, Dearest Dolly will delight.
About the Author
Buddy Barnard kept a journal of love letters to his wife, Dolly, from both the Phillipines and
Since it was impossible to keep a diary in the swamps and jungles of those islands, Buddy Barnard began a journal fifteen days before the bombing of
Buddy also asked his fellow G.I.s to write their own letter to Dolly. These “doughboy ditties” are written “to Dolly, the typical American sweetheart.” Another form of love and respect also appears in the letters. These G.I.s who had faced death together, wrote their feelings for one another in their letters. Most would never see each other again.