Puneet Varma (Editor)

Legion of the Lost

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Country
  
United States

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
2 August 2005

Page count
  
256

ISBN
  
0425210154

3.1/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
256

Author
  
Jaime Salazar

Genre
  
Autobiographical novel

Publisher
  
Berkley Books

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Publication date
  
August 2, 2005 (2005-08-02)

Similar
  
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Legion of the Lost is a autobiographical novel by American writer Jaime Salazar. It was published in the United States by Berkley Books, an imprint of Penguin Group, on August 2, 2005. The novel is based on Salazar's own experiences as an American in the French Foreign Legion. In 2016, Salazar released the revised and expanded edition of the book through Thistle Publishing UK.

Contents

Plot

It tells the story of Jaime, a bored and self-described corporate cog. In a quest to seek solace from his corporate existence, he joined the French Foreign Legion, reputed to be the world’s toughest army. He experiences brutality, adventure, and an uncompromising camaraderie. This is the story of his life in the "Army of Strangers". In a 2008 Note addition on the book’s website, Salazar puts into perspective his reckless weekend behavior, notably that with women, into the context of a typical young man’s military life. He claims not to condone such libertine, amorous behavior then or now. He also claims that some of the characters mentioned were morphed from multiple people. Salazar admits to describing a few incidents that were actually second hand accounts. He claims artistic license was taken for purposes of clarity and succinctness. In 2016, Salazar released the revised second edition of the book. It was scrubbed for errors and clarity. Additional details as well as a more spiritual air were included. A new black-and-white book cover was also created.

Legionnaire Woodman, one of the memorable characters in the book, was a thinly fictionalized version of a young US Army veteran. Notable as a heavily tattooed, hard-drinking brawler in Salazar's book, Woodman went on to return to the US military, were he served as a sniper who survived five combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. He later left the military to pursue an academic career, studying philosophy, logic and computer science at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Maryland.

Reception

New York Times reviewer William Grimes described the novel as an "improbable, very funny tale." "Salazar," Grimes wrote, "has a sly, sardonic sense of humor and a gift for understatement."

References

Legion of the Lost Wikipedia