Dear Dods - Info and Reading Options
letters from a conscientious objector in WWII
By Art Baker

"Dear Dods" was published by AuthorHouse in 2009 - Bloomington, Ind, it has 243 pages and the language of the book is English.
“Dear Dods” Metadata:
- Title: Dear Dods
- Author: Art Baker
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 243
- Publisher: AuthorHouse
- Publish Date: 2009
- Publish Location: Bloomington, Ind
“Dear Dods” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Correspondence - Civilian Public Service. Camp (Coleville, Calif.) - United States - American Personal narratives - United States. Army. Medical Administrative Corps - World War, 1939-1945 - Civilian Public Service - Conscientious objectors
- People: Art Baker - Barbara Baker
- Places: United States
Edition Specifications:
- Pagination: xvii, 243 p. :
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL23843214M - OL18782872W
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 2009900186
- ISBN-13: 9781438946696 - 9781438946702
- All ISBNs: 9781438946696 - 9781438946702
AI-generated Review of “Dear Dods”:
"Dear Dods" Description:
The Open Library:
When Art was drafted in early 1943 it was the beginning of four years of service to his country. He first served in a camp for conscientious objectors for seven months, and then was briefly at home, followed by assignment to a Medical Replacement Center in Texas. After three weeks in Pennsylvania preparing for overseas shipment, he was returned to Texas and assigned as company clerk in a unit preparing for overseas duty. Art was then transferred to MAC OCS [Medical Administrative Corps Officer Candidate School] preparing for his two years of service as an officer [with a conscientious objection military-noncombatant classification of 1-A-0]. Excerpts from the letters exchanged between Art and wife, Dods [Barbara], tell the story. It is a powerful story of a unique wartime experience; not as someone remembered it years later, but as the letters were written, in the heat of the moment, as decisions of conscience and character were required. In letters never intended to be read by anyone other than his "Dods", this soldier tells of the struggle he and others experienced seeking to serve conscience and country while conscripted into often conflicting circumstances. At CPS: no real mission except for the limited time actually fighting fires, well fed and comfortable but troubled over the absence of money for our families, restless over a desire to be true to ones' beliefs and a feeling of isolation from our countries crisis. In the army: being pressured not to think, not to ask questions, to do as you are told, learn to hate, to kill.--Publisher's description
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