"As a combat reporter, Pyle surpassed all others working during the Second World War, outwriting his contemporaries, Hemingway included. . . . His concern with the soldiers' morale and commitment to the cause . . . reveals more than any high-level analyses could. . . . Pyle was a cartographer, meticulously mapping the character of the Americans who chose to fight. . . . His style of combat realism, which eschews the macro and strategic for the micro and human, can be seen in today's combat reporting from Ukraine . . . where . . . the character of the Ukrainian people . . . has been the driving factor. . . . The collapse of Afghanistan's military and government came as a surprise to many Americans. . . . Only someone who understood the human side of war–as Pyle certainly did–could have predicted that collapse." –
Elliot Ackerman, The Atlantic "The welcome republication of
Brave Men . . . demonstrates why [Pyle] found such a large and appreciative audience. In sharp, simple prose, Pyle explained to those back home the conditions of life and death on the front. The writing remains fresh and perceptive." –
Foreign Affairs "A classic collection [by] the most beloved war correspondent of World War II . . . Pyle's style is what made him so popular back then, and why he is still worth reading today. He looks at the war from a retail level. He mentioned those he encountered by name, giving their home town, and occasionally their street address. . . . His prose is straightforward and spare, highly readable. . . . The book contains some of Pyle's best writing, including his best-known column, 'The Death of Captain Waskow.' . . . It is a reminder of the best in America back in the 1940s. Yet much of what he writes about still exists in today's small-town and rural America." ―
The Epoch Times "I personally cherish
Brave Men for . . . Pyle's descriptions of scenes he witnessed; his simple, unassuming style; and his ability to recognize the humanity in everyone he meets. . . . His eye for detail, what is essentially the eye of a poet, is on full display throughout
Brave Men and is a masterclass in how embedded witnesses can convey the truth about an experience that cannot be fully understood unless it is lived. . . . Even though he's been dead for nearly eight decades, Pyle had so much to say about the world we find ourselves living in today." ―
David Chrisinger, from the Introduction