"Affecting . . . A haunting slice of military life that unsparingly catalogues the risks, rewards, pain and joys of casting one's lot with warriors."--Kirkus Reviews
Out of the crucible of war has come a long list of best-selling, award-winning, and long-remembered novels: The Red Badge of Courage, All Quiet on the Western Front, The Caine Mutiny, Fields of Fire, and The Thirteenth Valley. But none so far has ever captured the power and drama of the United States Marine Corps's ill-fated mission to end the war for Lebanon, which culminated in the barracks bombing that killed almost three hundred Marines.
For Sergeant David Griffin, a "peacetime" Marine, Beirut was the chance to prove himself capable to the generation of Marines who had been bloodied in the Vietnam War. For Corporal Steven Downs, Beirut was a struggle to separate the civilian from the soldier, his distrust of the politicians' decisions from the military mission. For all of the Marines serving in Lebanon, it was another war in a foreign country where the enemy could be anywhere or anyone.
Faced with Griffin's court-martial for engaging the enemy against orders, these two young men find themselves questioning their faith in themselves, their commanders, and eventually that which above all else they must have faith in--the Corps. With the insight that only a Marine Corps veteran could have, C. X. Moreau portrays the men who fought and died in Beirut with skill and ability that bring home to the reader the true meaning of Semper Fi.
"Moreau uses the building block of authentic detail to craft a solid take about a little-known, undeclared war."--Publishers Weekly
"Outstanding! A classic in, yet above and beyond, the war genre."--John M. Del Vecchio, The New York Times best-selling author of The Thirteenth Valley
"With his first book, Distant Valor, C. X. Moreau, joins the company of top rank military novelists. He shows the reader what it really means to be a Marine."--W.E.B. Griffin, The New York Times best-selling author of The Corps series
"A novel of character, as are all great war novels . . . cuts to the heart of the military experience in our time . . ."--San Jose Mercury News