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08/07/2006

Over Here —Imagine telling an entire generation they could receive a free college education at any school that would accept them — Texas A&M, Harvard University, the Sorbonne — anywhere. Throw in a monthly stipend for living expenses, plus more money for books. And when you graduate, there's a government-backed home loan waiting, no money down and no credit checks — buy a house cheaper than renting an apartment. Throw in subsidized farm loans, business loans, free job training, free medical care, free job placement, and up to a year’s worth of weekly paychecks until you find work. What insane congressman, senator or president would ever approve such a costly boondoggle? It could never pass today, for it would be the most enormous, far-reaching, life-changing government program in the history of the world.

And so it was: the post-World War II G.I. Bill. It revolutionized higher education, created suburbia, brought us the scientists, engineers, doctors, artists and teachers who built most of what is good in America today. In October 2006, my new book, Over Here: How the G.I. Bill Transformed the American Dream, will recount this sometimes surprising history and its lasting legacy. Consider it a book not of war stories, but of after-the-war stories, and in them you’ll meet film and theater director Arthur Penn (Bonnie and Clyde, The Miracle Worker, the Nixon-Kennedy debates), Nobelist Leon Lederman (helped invent modern particle physics), civil rights crusader Monte Posey, George McGovern, Bob Dole, Josette Dermody Wingo and many others. Stay tuned for more updates as the pub date nears.

Early Reviews of Over Here are in!

  • Carolyn See: An immensely readable account of one of the smartest, most workable projects our government ever thought up.
  • George McGovern:A superb description of one of the marvels of American history.
  • Bob Kerrey: A wonderful, personal, and important reminder of how a single law enabled millions of highly motivated and grateful Americans to transform our country.>
  • D.J. Waldie: Humes has a wonderful knack for finding a big story in the little stories of everyday life.
  • Arthur Penn: The G.I. Bill changed the course of millions of American lives and gave America the chance for “the pursuit of happiness” long promised and long delayed.
  • Lawrence Ferlinghetti: Over Here — the great untold story that needs to be told all the younger generations.
  • Kirkus Reviews: The author is at his best explaining the bill's unanticipated, transformative effect on American society…. Careful and colorful reporting renders this seldom-told part of the Greatest Generation's story every bit as inspiring as those recounting its survival of the Depression and triumph in war.