Day of Infamy is Walter Lord's gripping, vivid re-creation of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Sunday, December 7, 1941. In brilliant detail Walter Lord traces the human drama of the great attack: the spies behind it; the Japanese pilots; the crews on the stricken warships; the men at the airfields and the bases; the Japanese pilot who captured an island single-handedly when he could not get back to his carrier; the generals, the sailors, the housewives, and the children who responded to the attack with anger, numbness, and magnificent courage.
In compiling his masterpiece, Lord traveled over fourteen thousand miles and spoke or corresponded with over five hundred individuals on both sides who were there, creating the best account we have of one of the epic events in American history.
Answer:
Ecuador - in northwestern South America
Explanation:
The Country of the Blind" is a short story written by an English writer known as Herbert George Wells. The story talks about a certain mountaineer named Nuñez, who is blind in one eye and was said to have moved to a village in the Andes Mountain, Ecuador - in northwestern South America.
The story has it that there was an earthquake in the area, fifteen generations before, that cut off the entire villagers from civilization.
Answer:
its a
Explanation:
because money is an inanimate object
Answer:
The two men travel a thousand miles at a time before they stop for the night.
Explanation:
Gilgamesh: The New English Version, has a long, instructive and full of twists and turns and ups and downs. This trajectory is told through the journey that Gilgamesh and Enkidu trace in search of immortality. Although this goal is not achieved, they experience several situations that convey valuable and inspiring teachings.
The journey is very long and full of challenges, so many, that the two men cannot finish the journey at once and travel a thousand miles at once, but must stop for a while to stay overnight and rest.