The Drums of War (Amazon)

The Drums of War is a profoundly personal and intimate account of a young man’s flight training in 1918– where he learned about discipline, fear, courage, adversity and depression—and his difficult return to civilian life and eventual hope for a brighter future.

Cy Corbett relished the excitement and adrenalin rush of early flight. He experienced sixteen forced landings and one serious crash, but considered himself lucky: several fellow cadets were killed or seriously maimed. And through this, he learned that his Irish Melancholy–his Depression–seemed to vanish while he was in flight.

The book begins with student’s contemporaneous journal entries debating the merits of his country going to war alongside an old enemy–Britain. After being drafted, the author joins the most perilous of services, the Army Air Corps. After earning his wings, and finally en route to his scheduled deployment overseas, Cy found himself in a train car waking to shouts and celebrating in the streets. The Armistice had been declared. The war was suddenly over.

Returning home to a mundane civilian life was filled with confusion, disarray, death of his mother, and finally, near the end, a ray of hope for the future.

Description

A Note from the Editor:

My father, Thomas Cyril Corbett, was born in 1895 and died in 1976. By 1912 he had taught himself Morse code and communicated with ships on the Great Lakes. In 1918 he piloted Army biplanes fifteen years after the Wright brothers made their historic flight, and then Cy lived to see man land on the moon and return safely. The fact that man had progressed technologically so quickly in one lifetime simply amazed him.

As editor, I have assembled his various writings and attempted to put together works of interest to an audience beyond members of our immediate family. You will learn about the life of my father from several sources: journals he intermittently kept from 1916 through his death; the Greenwood Avenue stories he wrote in the early 1970s; a novel he kept revising over a thirty-year period; and letters and other writings, including a partially-finished history of his alma mater—St. Ignatius College—and various vignettes he wrote from time to time.

Following the Great War (WWI), Cy was honorably discharged from the fledgling US Army Air Corps. He worked in a variety of jobs, finally landing at the Chicago Tribune in 1921 as a copywriter and editor. After nearly twenty-five years he resigned and moved to Michigan. He built a small summer resort on six and a half acres overlooking the big lake. The revenue from summer vacationers helped him live and send his kids to college. And in the off-season, he wrote.

 

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