If you like inspiring biographies, if you like military
history and even if you have not previously,
if you are an American patriot, if you are a proud Texan, if you feel the Aggie
Spirit, if you have a passion for education, and if you believe in Divine guidance, this
book is for you.
Previously I knew Earl Rudder as the visionary President of
Texas A&M who had a military background and was the guiding force in transitioning
Texas A&M from an all male, compulsory military school to a co-educational
institution with no military requirement. The rest of his story is so much larger than
life.
He never planned to go to college, but one event after another in his life kept him moving toward a destiny and place in history even he would not have believed had he not lived it. He was a very honorable man who made the absolute most of every opportunity that came his way, and in doing so had a rather large impact on the world.
He never planned to go to college, but one event after another in his life kept him moving toward a destiny and place in history even he would not have believed had he not lived it. He was a very honorable man who made the absolute most of every opportunity that came his way, and in doing so had a rather large impact on the world.
The author, Thomas Hatfield, travels back to Earl Rudders
early life in Brady, Texas and writes in such a way, that he involved me in the
story and the individual, so that I, who had never read any military history,
could not wait to turn each page wading through and learning details of World
War II and the D Day Invasion with such rapt interest that, other than falling
asleep while holding the book, I did not put it down until I had finished.
I love to read and this is one of the most inspiring books I
have ever read. I think this is a book
every American should own. It is much
much larger than the story of a former Aggie President. It is about a man who, in his rather short
life of 59 years, left a legacy immensely larger than he ever could have
imagined for himself.
Sue Ann Lockard
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