Steve B. (fog) - reviewed Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII on + 139 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A very good book that contains interesting background facts about Chester Nez. His early childhood training and first exposure to "white men" set the groundwork for his Marine career. While the book didn't go into a lot of detail of the conflicts Chester was in it did bring enough attention to the daily routine and the importance of the Code Talkers. This is a worthwhile first hand account of the development and use of the Navajo language as the only unbroken code used in WWII.
Thomas F. (hardtack) - , reviewed Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII on + 2700 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Chester Nez was a Marine code talker during World War II. As a former Marine myself, I laud his service as a Marine, his courage and his sense of duty to a country which didn't always treat him fairly. I was especially impressed by his acknowledgement that his forced instruction to learn English at a severe boarding school later allowed him and others to serve as code talkers. What they did during the war cannot be understated.
The U.S. wasn't the only country which tried its best to beat native inhabitants out of their culture. For example, Australia, my mother's country, did the same to its aborigines. Fortunately, both countries have admitted their mistakes and attempted to atone for them.
However, I do have a problem with some of Nez's memories. The author states in her introduction that when Nez's memories differed with official documentation, she went with his memories. I wondered about this at the time. Later, I came to believe she was trying to alert us to the fact this elderly man might have some problems with his memories.
For example, Nez relates how in November, 1942, when he, with the 2nd Marine Division, landed on Guadalcanal to relieve the 1st Marine Division, there was extensive fighting on the beachhead. He recalls Japanese bullets coming close and wading through American and Japanese bodies and parts of bodies in the surf. Never happened. Perhaps the elderly Nez was recalling another island assault. By November, 1942, the U.S. had control of the waters in and around Guadalcanal during the day. This is when the 2nd Marine Division and some U.S. Army units came ashore. There was no resistance to that landing as the Japanese Navy only ventured into those waters at night, and the Japanese army had been pushed well back from the Henderson airfield beachhead.
Nez also mentions throughout the book that he and other Navajo code talkers were not allowed to even tell their families of their role in the war until the 1960s. Yet on page 215 he 'remembers' that soon after World War II ended a Japanese newspaper revealed the role of the Navajo Marines.
I'm glad Nez and other surviving code talkers finally received awards and praise. Aside from some of his memory problems, this is a interesting book about some wonderful Marines. During the war, the Marine Corps realized these valuable men needed to spend all their time transmitting messages, so they were assigned Marine bodyguards. A Hollywood movie about these men leads viewers to believe the bodyguards were also suppose to kill any code talkers about to be captured by the Japanese. Nez states in the book the Corps never denied this. Frankly, I find it hard to believe that story, especially as a few code talkers were captured.
The U.S. wasn't the only country which tried its best to beat native inhabitants out of their culture. For example, Australia, my mother's country, did the same to its aborigines. Fortunately, both countries have admitted their mistakes and attempted to atone for them.
However, I do have a problem with some of Nez's memories. The author states in her introduction that when Nez's memories differed with official documentation, she went with his memories. I wondered about this at the time. Later, I came to believe she was trying to alert us to the fact this elderly man might have some problems with his memories.
For example, Nez relates how in November, 1942, when he, with the 2nd Marine Division, landed on Guadalcanal to relieve the 1st Marine Division, there was extensive fighting on the beachhead. He recalls Japanese bullets coming close and wading through American and Japanese bodies and parts of bodies in the surf. Never happened. Perhaps the elderly Nez was recalling another island assault. By November, 1942, the U.S. had control of the waters in and around Guadalcanal during the day. This is when the 2nd Marine Division and some U.S. Army units came ashore. There was no resistance to that landing as the Japanese Navy only ventured into those waters at night, and the Japanese army had been pushed well back from the Henderson airfield beachhead.
Nez also mentions throughout the book that he and other Navajo code talkers were not allowed to even tell their families of their role in the war until the 1960s. Yet on page 215 he 'remembers' that soon after World War II ended a Japanese newspaper revealed the role of the Navajo Marines.
I'm glad Nez and other surviving code talkers finally received awards and praise. Aside from some of his memory problems, this is a interesting book about some wonderful Marines. During the war, the Marine Corps realized these valuable men needed to spend all their time transmitting messages, so they were assigned Marine bodyguards. A Hollywood movie about these men leads viewers to believe the bodyguards were also suppose to kill any code talkers about to be captured by the Japanese. Nez states in the book the Corps never denied this. Frankly, I find it hard to believe that story, especially as a few code talkers were captured.
LaVonne W. (Grnemae) - , reviewed Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII on + 451 more book reviews
Chester Nez was one of the first 30 Code Talkers. He helped to develop the code based on his native Navajo language. Only code never broken by the Japanese during the war in the Pacific during WWII.
Chester takes you through his life as a child and explains how he came to be chosen by the military for this assignment.
Fascinating book with pictures and the actual code. Chester's and the other Code Talkers story and the code they developed could never be talked about even with family until it was declassified in 1968.
Chester takes you through his life as a child and explains how he came to be chosen by the military for this assignment.
Fascinating book with pictures and the actual code. Chester's and the other Code Talkers story and the code they developed could never be talked about even with family until it was declassified in 1968.
Dana W. (SouthWestZippy) - , reviewed Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir By One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII on + 265 more book reviews
Not a easy book to read because of the intense feelings it summons up or to review because of all the reviews already written.
Chester Nez shares some his life stories while living on the Navajo reservation and some of the horror he witness while in boarding school. The stories about how the Code Talkers started and their work were fascinating. Chester Nez also shares a little about his life after the war. The book reads more like a memoir than it does a history book which I find more engaging, is was like peeking into someones diary. Highly recommend.
Chester Nez shares some his life stories while living on the Navajo reservation and some of the horror he witness while in boarding school. The stories about how the Code Talkers started and their work were fascinating. Chester Nez also shares a little about his life after the war. The book reads more like a memoir than it does a history book which I find more engaging, is was like peeking into someones diary. Highly recommend.