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COURAGE HAS NO COLOR by Tanya Lee Stone Kirkus Star

COURAGE HAS NO COLOR

The True Story of the Triple Nickles: America's First Black Paratroopers

by Tanya Lee Stone

Pub Date: Jan. 22nd, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-7636-5117-6
Publisher: Candlewick

The fascinating untold story of the 555th Parachute Infantry Battalion, America’s first black paratroopers.

While white American soldiers battled Hitler’s tyranny overseas, African-Americans who enlisted to fight for their country faced the tyranny of racial discrimination on the homefront. Segregated from white soldiers and relegated to service duties and menial tasks, enlisted black men faced what Ashley Bryan calls in the foreword “the racism that was our daily fare at the time.” When 1st Sgt. Walter Morris, whose men served as guards at The Parachute School at Fort Benning, saw white soldiers training to be paratroopers, he knew his men would have to train and act like them to be treated like soldiers. Daring initiative and leadership led to the creation of the “Triple Nickles.” Defying the deeply ingrained stereotypes of the time, the Triple Nickles proved themselves as capable and tough as any white soldiers, but they were never used in combat, serving instead as smoke jumpers extinguishing Japanese-ignited forest fires in the Pacific Northwest. Stone’s richly layered narrative explores the cultural and institutional prejudices of the time as well as the history of African-Americans in the military. Her interviews with veterans of the unit provide groundbreaking insight. Among the archival illustrations in this handsomely designed book are drawings Bryan created while he served in World War II.

An exceptionally well-researched, lovingly crafted and important tribute to unsung American heroes.

(photographs, chronology, sources note, bibliography) (Nonfiction. 10 & up)