Reviews
Praise for THE BONUS ARMY
"A model of
clear-eyed history. The book never flinches, though you will. And, here
and there, readers may speculate as to today's military, its eventual
return from the Middle East, and its response to the riches that some
U.S. civilians have meanwhile amassed."
— James H. Bready, The Baltimore Sun
"'The Bonus Army,' a haunting, compellingly written and marvelously
researched book, is an important contribution to American history."
— Clancy Sigal, The Los Angeles Times
"A revealing and bleakly fascinating account...The book's most haunting
aspect is its verbal and pictorial record of the marchers' individual
experiences...For all the defeats that the Bonus Army endured, its
struggle paved the way for the G.I. Bill of Rights. And it underscored
the power that could be unleashed by the marcher who made himself "a
petition in boots." Its legacy was of great importance to the World War
II veterans whose homecomings were a far cry from the hardships and
indignities of the 1930's. That legacy is all the more meaningful
today."
—Janet Maslin, The New York Times
"President Herbert Hoover is one of the most tragic figures in American
history. Before becoming president, he was the great humanitarian, the
most popular public figure in America. Then came the Great Depression,
for which he received the brunt of the blame. He was accused of ordering
the shooting of the Bonus Army and the burning of their tents in
Washington, DC. As Paul Dickson and Thomas Allen have shown in their
recent book, 'The Bonus Army: an American Epic,' Hoover was tricked.
Those responsible were General Douglas MacArthur and George Patton.
Hoover became deeply embittered. His old expansiveness disappeared. He
withdrew into his shell and conversation with him became difficult."
—Ronald Hilton, The Stanford Daily
"So well researched and historically accurate that this reader was only
left with a sense of disgust in my gut and a renewed resolve to fight
for the just respect the American veteran has earned .... Read this
book."
—Veterans Journal
"Dramatic ... "The Bonus Army" is more than a story of a group of strong
and determined veterans. It is also a history of World War I and the
economic depression that led thousands of men and women to march on the
nation's capital."
—Daily Oklahoman
"The Bonus Army has long been a topic of scholarly interest, but his is
the most complete story we have of the movement and its aftermath...An
excellent book."
—The American Scholar
"Paul Dickson and Thomas B. Allen's The Bonus Army arrives at a
propitious moment, given the inordinate sacrifices now being demanded of
soldiers and marines in Iraq and Afghanistan. Sooner or later, a large
number of new veterans, both whole and wounded in body and mind, will
return home demanding benefits from an administration loaded with
policymakers who never served in the military. (Disclosure: I knew
Dickson years ago when he published an article in a magazine I edited.)
Dickson is the author of books on Washington's fledgling think tanks and
on electronic warfare and Allen's subjects have included Pearl Harbor
and Admiral Hyman Rickover. Together they have produced an impressive,
important, and extremely well researched account of what happened when
the U.S. reneged on its pledge."
—Murray Polner, History
News Network
"The Bonus Army is one of those half-forgotten chapters in American
history that not only richly deserves retelling, but allows you to tell
plenty of other good stories along the way. And what a great pleasure it
is to have it retold by two old pros like Paul Dickson and Thomas B.
Allen...Exactly the kind of book publishers should be giving us more of
- responsible popular history, researched to the footnoted standards of
the academy but written for the pleasure of general readers who are
looking for a good story...A rewarding book."
—Kevin Coyne,
Newsday
"In the current era of rights and entitlements, the back story to the
saga of the Bonus Army -- the federal government refusing to pay its
citizens what it owes them -- is hard to fathom ... In The Bonus Army:
An American Epic (Walker, $27), Paul Dickson and Thomas B. Allen tell
the whole story, all the way to its legacy, the GI bill enacted for
veterans of World War II."
— The Washington
Post
"[THE BONUS ARMY] succeeds as pure narrative ...Thanks to this
thoroughly researched, tightly focused book, what that march itself
involved is clearer than ever before."
—Luther Spoehr, The
Providence Journal
"Dickson and Allen have done some great research and are supurb
storytellers. They expand beyond the dimensions of a conventional
history, telling the stories of veterans in the camps, the leaders of
government and the local residents ... This highly readable book covers
the event in fine detail. It serves as a great civics lesson on how
countries should and should not treat those who serve in
uniform."
— Kevin M. Hymel, Army Magazine
"Dickson and Allen have written a thoroughly researched and spirited
narrative of the Bonus Army. They have done yeoman work in mining the
relevant archives, and their interviews with many of the surviving
witnesses add new testimony to the record of the March . . . The Bonus
Army has received much less attention than it deserves. But, with their
readable and exhaustive account, Dickson and Allen have gone a long way
toward remedying that situation."
—Tom Miller,
Military.com
"The Bonus Army is a terrific book. Exhaustively researched but
simply written, it holds the reader's attention from beginning to end. I
personally remember the momentous events of the July day in 1932, but
before reading this account I had no idea of the drama, the pathos, the
confusion, and the lasting importance of the event. Highly recommended
for any reader who seeks a rounded knowledge of America of the twentieth
century."
—John S. D. Eisenhower
"A tragic yet
enormously important chapter in the making of 20th century America,
beautifully and brilliantly told by Dickson and Allen. The GI Bill
lifted ten million veterans into the middle class through vocational
rehabilitation, low-cost home mortgages, college tuition, and living
expenses. Without the Bonus Army tragedy, there never would have been a
GI Bill. You cannot fully understand contemporary America unless you
understand the Bonus Army."
—Mark Shields
"In The Bonus Army, authors Paul Dickson and Thomas B. Allen,
provide an astonishing, and largely forgotten, account of how our
veterans, fueled by desperation and determination, anger and honor,
overcame political obstacles and tactics as formidable as those they had
faced on the battlefield. This is must reading, not only for today's
political leaders, but for all Americans who understand the need to
fight for the fair treatment of those we ask to carry the fight for
freedom."
—William S. Cohen, former Secretary of
Defense
"Meticulously researched and engagingly written, The Bonus Army
captures the pathos and high emotion that this under-appreciated episode
in American history generated in 1932. As the nation prepares to
welcome home another generation of wartime veterans, it offers a
cautionary and instructional tale about the permanent bond that modern
military service creates between veterans and the state."
—Jennifer D. Keene, author of Doughboys, the Great War and the
Remaking of America
"By a far stretch the best-written account of the BEF and the first
scholarly attempt in nearly two decades. The authors, both experienced
history writers, debunk many of the old myths and shine new light on
this astonishing episode...In telling the story of "The Bonus Army," in
a gripping style packed with facts, Dickson and Allen do great honor to
all veterans -- and remind us that one of our most important battles was
fought with blood and fire at the steps of our own government."
—Joel Turnipseed, Minneapolis Star Tribune
"This thoroughly researched and eminently readable book is one that
every veteran, indeed, every American should read . . . Mr. Dickson and
Mr. Allen have done a fine job of reminding Americans of the almost
forgotten fight a relatively few of them made to finally shame the
Congress into paying what in effect was a mere pittance in return for
the sacrifices they had made during the Great War."
—Lyn
Nofziger, The Washington Times
"The authors argue that this is one of the pivotal events of
20th-century U.S. history, and they make a good case....The benefits
veterans have today express a stronger appreciation of service. This
book is a reminder that they also have another purpose, which is to
ensure nothing like this ever happens again."
—Bruce Ramsey,
The Seattle Times
"Extensively researched and documented, "The Bonus Army" provides a
valuable historical record as well as a timely look at how this nation
has treated its veterans."
—Jewel Lansing, Portland
Oregonian
"Before the Million Man March, the Million Mom March or Martin Luther
King, Jr.'s March on Washington, there was the Bonus Expeditionary Force
(BEF): 45,000 WWI vets who, in 1932, swarmed Washington, D.C., in
freight cars, crank-start jalopies, on motorcycles and even on foot from
as far away as Portland, Ore., to demand payment of the bonus promised
them at the end of the war. As Dickson and Allen show throughout this
empathetic and well-researched volume, the BEF meant different things to
a number of groups vying for power in the tumultuous political climate
of the early '30s. Communist organizers saw the veterans as the shock
troops of the emerging "American Soviet Government"; the Hoover
administration viewed them as mostly "ex-convicts, persons with criminal
records, radicals, and non-servicemen" trying to strong-arm the
government; and corporate America saw them as competition for dwindling
government aid money. To most Americans, however, they were underdogs
fighting the government and the corporate corruption that, in their
minds, was responsible for the Depression. The book moves beyond these
broad generalizations to find the personal stories of the march,
fleshing out both minor and major players surrounding the BEF. And in
describing the use of tanks, bayonets and tear gas to expel the unarmed
vets and their families from Washington-as well as the deadly
mistreatment of BEF members in government work camps after the
march-Dickson and Allen highlight the sacrifices these women and men
made on our own soil to win fair treatment for veterans of future wars.
Their important and moving work will appeal to both professional
historians and casual readers interested in the history of America's
changing attitudes towards its soldiers."
—Publishers
Weekly
"In 1932, approximately 45,000 veterans of World War
I converged on Washington, DC. In 1924, they had been promised a cash
bonus for their service, but it was to be deferred until 1945. With the
nation mired deep in the Depression, the so-called Bonus Army demanded
immediate payment. For two months, the protestors lived in shantytowns
on the outskirts of the city and issued increasingly strident demands.
Eventually, troops under the command of Douglas MacArthur dispersed them
and destroyed the shantytowns. It was a sad but quickly forgotten
episode as the politics of the New Deal and the looming threat of war in
Europe and Asia came to dominate national consciousness. Dickson and
Allen, who have written numerous books of American history, assert that
the long-range importance of the Bonus Army has been grossly
underestimated. In this agreeably written and often moving account,
they describe a unique gathering of whites, blacks, and urban and rural
poor united by a vision of social justice. This is an important
reexamination of a still controversial
event."
—Booklist
"Here a demonstrator is clubbed and tear-gassed, but there real reforms
are won: thus unfolds this memorable story of a now-forgotten episode in
20th-century history...The lesson the New Deal government took home:
avoid ticking off discontented veterans, whence the GI Bill. A lively,
engaging work of history."
—Kirkus Reviews
"a timely reminder of society's obligations to returned
soldiers."—Roger K. Miller, Denver Post
For further information about
THE BONUS ARMY
or for review
copies or interview arrangements
contact Peter Miller at Walker
& Company
212-727-8300, ext. 3011.