Written by ROBERT KANIGHER - Art and cover by JOE KUBERT War is hell - and no one knows that better than Sgt. Rock and Easy Company. Collecting stories from OUR ARMY AT WAR #149-163, 165-172 and 174-180.
"He was just an ordinary soldier. But in a time when the United States needed a true hero, Sgt. Frank Rock emerged as a symbol of patriotism during the country's battle against the Nazi menace in World War II" -- p. [4] of cover.
A first-hand account of life in a combat zone of the Vietnam War offering a raw description of a war experience that deserves our attention and awareness on the merit of going to war.
From the bloody beaches of Normandy, to the muddy forests of the Vosges Mountains, a cut-off company led by Sgt. Rock is joined by Johnny Cloud and the Haunted Tank as they battle for their lives behind enemy lines against a force ten times their size.
Sergeant Rock evolves from a native, baseball-playing, church-going Christian and skinny college kid to a well-trained killing machine in Vietnam. Leaving California to take part in the Tet Offensive in 1968, he finds the culture shock between the two overwhelming. Thrust into war and killing, he finds his approach to life and death must change quickly, but he holds fast to his beliefs. Though he saves others, his attitude toward killing and death changes for the worse, while his approach toward life improves. Sergeant Rock is a much better person for the choices he makes. In the course of a single Tet Offensive battle, his company loses all but 13 men, as 126 soldiers die in two hours. His faith increases when he meets his guardian angel during the battle. Sergeant Rock pushes his squad to their limits because he knows that death may lie just beyond the next bush. He may be only 20, but he thinks like an old veteran. With the body count in his mind, he wonders if he can ever be around normal people again. He experiences many horrors and watches friend after friend die as heroes. The hardships his squad must face, such as going without fresh water or clothes for 57 days, being shot down in a chopper, and just trying to stay alive are overwhelming. How much can our minds take before they crack? Sergeant Rock believes divine intervention is the only reason he is alive to tell his story.
In a time when America needed a true hero, Sgt. Frank Rockemerged as a symbol of patriotism during the United States' battle againstthe Nazis in World War II. Reprinted in this edition are nineteen of themost hard-hitting Sgt. Rock war stories ever told, including an early"prototype" version of the ultimate war hero as well as his firstappearance. Leading Easy Company against the worst evil man has truly everfaced, Sgt. Rock was and still is an emblem of America's fighting spirit.
"USS Stevens is both an excellent graphic narrative and an important record of an American warship's service in the Pacific campaign of World War Two. It also serves as a fine tribute to the young sailors of the US Navy, who faced the forces of Imperial Japan in battle after battle, enduring countless hardships on the long journey to victory. Mr. Glanzman has my admiration, respect and profound gratitude." — Garth Ennis, Eisner Award–winning writer of Preacher and The Punisher, Hellblazer, Judge Dredd, and Hitman. Legendary Golden Age artist Sam Glanzman set many of his tales aboard the USS Stevens, the actual World War II destroyer on which he served. This full-color, hardcover treasury collects every single Stevens tale he ever published, more than 60 short adventures from Our Army at War, G. I. Combat, and other 1970s DC war comics as well as longer pieces from Marvel's 1986 revival of Savage Tales magazine and the more recent Joe Kubert Presents. Plus, this outstanding collection also includes the final, four-page story about the warship, newly written and illustrated by Glanzman himself. Exclusive Bonus Material: • New four-page U.S.S. Stevens story by Sam Glanzman • Letters from President Barack Obama and President George H.W. Bush • Extended footnotes and story annotations by Jon B. Cooke • Sam Glanzman's WAR DIARY #1–4 • First appearance of the U.S.S. Stevens in a comic book • New Foreword by Ivan Brandon • New Introduction by Jon B. Cooke • New Afterword by Allan Asherman
It's 1943, and World War II has reached fever pitch. Somewhere deep within a smoldering, war-torn village in Nazi-occupied Lithuania hides a secret treasure that must be found and returned to the U.S. unharmedÑby any means necessary. It's up to the trusted G.I.s of Easy to save the day. But once they discover what the prize really is, will they be able to follow through with the mission?