It is known that those who fought and won World War II were part of the Greatest
Generation, yet so much of what really made them so great, aside from their
incredible military victory, has been forgotten with the passage of time and the
loss of generational perspective.
In a narrated journey of a Midwestern boy, Author, beginning in 1920, Bryan
T. Blunt shares a fascinating glimpse into how the Greatest Generation lived,
as well as an assessment, commentary, review, and synopsis of what made that
generation great across so many families. As he invites others into the world of
Albert, Lena, Lola Belle, Art, and a host of other unsung heroes from a historic
generation, Blunt follows Author's coming-of-age journey, one in which right
doctrine, matured through poverty, personal loss, and the Great Depression led
him to become a man who made a diff erence in his corner of the world. Blunt
then addresses how that generation rose to such greatness, and he off ers a path
to begin turning the contemporary slide of generational distinction back toward
that which was last seen in the Greatest Generation.
Lest We Forget shares the biography of a Greatest Generation American and
provides an inspiring perspective on how a return to values once held would
benefi t modern society and generations to come.