All Roads Lead to Rome bookcover

All Roads Lead to Rome

Searching for the End of My Father's War
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Description

What happens when a seasoned journalist and travel writer takes on his most challenging assignment yet--crossing not just continents but also history--by retracing his father's steps on the battlefields of Italy in World War II?

When a slim packet of his father's letters came to light after his mother's death, Bill Thorness began a quest to rediscover his father. Thorness traveled to the World War II battlefields where America's first team of commandos fought. The youngest son of one of those commandos, Thorness gained a sense of the horror his father had kept from his family while standing on the mountain where the First Special Service Force fought. Then, standing on a bridge in Rome, he reflected on the loss his father must have felt in not making it to the end of the campaign to liberate the Eternal City.

In All Roads Lead to Rome Thorness considers his father's decisive moments in battle and beyond, and how he soldiered on as a disabled veteran through his life, raising a family and succumbing to an early death. Alternating between reimagined battle scenes and present-day travels, Thorness explores World War II and family history, the value and limits of memory, the attitudes of war, and our society's inadequate understanding and support of combat veterans, who may return with physical and emotional scars that change them deeply.

Thorness steps into his father's shoes to revisit his story and finish that walk into Rome, weaving an account that is part travelogue, part history, and part memoir about the ravages of war.

Product Details

PublisherPotomac Books
Publish DateDecember 01, 2024
Pages280
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9781640126275
Dimensions8.6 X 5.9 X 1.2 inches | 1.3 pounds
BISAC Categories: Biography & Memoir, History

About the Author

Bill Thorness's varied work as a journalist has spanned more than thirty-five years, from early work as editor of a national business magazine to current work as a freelance travel writer for the Seattle Times. He is the author of five nonfiction books, including Cycling the Pacific Coast: The Complete Guide from Canada to Mexico.

Reviews

"Thorness's descriptions of the long-forgotten battles involved are vivid and his depictions of the Italian landscape 70 years later serve as reminders of the war which changed so many families and lives. Readers who had relatives affected by the conflict will find this tale of a son seeking to understand his father a compelling journey into the past."--J. Kemper Campbell, Lincoln Journal Star-- (1/17/2025 12:00:00 AM)
"Retracing his father's steps, Thorness admirably chronicles his father's service while relating his own march through Italy over 60 years later, gaining insight into both his father and himself."--Philip Zozzaro, Booklist-- (11/1/2024 12:00:00 AM)
"All Roads Lead to Rome is a deftly woven history of one man's attempt to understand his father's taciturn and damaged life by hiking the route his father's army commando unit took as it fought its way north from the Anzio beaches to liberate Rome from the Nazis in World War II. A warm memoir and a historical resource, All Roads Lead to Rome stands as a heartfelt attempt to bridge a generation gap and probe the brutal and fiercely debilitating impact of war."--Kit Bakke, author of Protest on Trial and Miss Alcott's E-mail
"A touching and outstanding story, All Roads Lead to Rome is Bill Thorness's journey to understanding his father, which takes us from the farmland of North Dakota to the battlefields of World War II Italy."--Bill Woon, past executive director of the First Special Service Force Association and son of Force veteran Dave Woon, 2nd Company, 2nd Regiment
"Any hope that humanity will more quickly move beyond war as a method of conflict resolution will likely come as a result of leaders who, whether personally or peripherally, finally acknowledge and speak to the damaging ramifications of war on present and future generations. Books such as All Roads Lead to Rome are vital for what they can add to this awareness, and it is one of the best books I have read so far on the cross-generational impact of military service, particularly combat."--Tracy Crow, coeditor of It's My Country Too: Women's Military Stories from the American Revolution to Afghanistan
"All Roads Lead to Rome starts as a journey of discovery and becomes one of self-discovery. A masterful accomplishment."--Steve Olson, author of The Apocalypse Factory: Plutonium and the Making of the Atomic Age
"A moving and compelling story about the enduring power of the past. Bill Thorness juxtaposes two Italian journeys--his father's during the Anzio campaign of World War II and his own retracing of it--to find a parent whose damaged leg disguised deeper wounds. He discovers a war's lasting consequences."--Richard White, Margaret Byrne Professor of American History emeritus, Stanford University, and author of Who Killed Jane Stanford?
"An expansive journey through World War II Italy, All Roads Lead to Rome is a poignant, picturesque memoir of redemption and truth between father and son, past and present."--Alicia DeFonzo, author of The Time Left between Us

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