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He has read a book about a Japanese hitman, a "horrible" horror novel about a vampire-like villain who sustains himself by draining women of their vitamins through sexual intercourse, and Marcus Luttrell's "Lone Survivor," a true story about a Navy SEAL. One afternoon, Sgt. Abel Aceituno of San Francisco sat in the sun and read "The Fifth Profession" by David Morrell. He described what he knew of the plot so far
-- an alarm system, a labyrinth, a Greek drug lord. "I never thought I could be captivated, but it caught my attention. It gives me a chance to get away from where I'm at," said Aceituno. On base, he brings a book to the chow hall. On this mission, the company commander, Capt. Michael Kovalsky, brought Ernest Hemingway's "The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories," and "Forever," by Pete Hamill. The jacket fell off the Hemingway book, so he drew the cover image in pen and colored pencil on the blank hard cover: a biplane, and the snowcapped volcano. "Forever" was recommended by his father. "I thought it sounded kind of cheap and stupid, but it has become my favorite book," said Kovalsky, outlining the plot that begins in 18th century Ireland, moves through the American revolutionary period and the "Boss" Tweed era of New York, and leads to Sept. 11, 2001
-- the attack on the twin towers that led the U.S. into war in Afghanistan. "The real character and the main character is New York City," the captain said. "Pete Hamill has this great style of bringing to life something inanimate. He's a natural New Yorker." Kovalsky, 26, is from Fords, New Jersey, less than 30 miles (50 kilometers) from Manhattan. A self-described "fan of rhetoric," Kovalsky began to recite "The Raven" by Edgar Allen Poe: "Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary ..." Next he quoted from President Abraham Lincoln's letter to Mrs. Bixby, who lost sons in the Civil War: "I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine ..." Up on the roof of the company outpost, Pfc. Andrew Ubil of Sacramento, California, was in full combat gear, on guard duty behind a pile of sandbags. He is 19 years old, a 2008 high school graduate. He said he doesn't read. But as he killed time until the end of his shift, his measured, drifting phrases carried a kind of rough poetry of their own. "Sixth grade not too long ago, high school, graduation and now I'm in Afghanistan ... It's just finding out how much you take for granted ... That's what I wanted to do, see different things ... Old enough to die for your country, but still a kid ... Get used to it, I guess ... These people don't quit. You've got to shoot them a few times to get them to stop ... I kind of like the culture here. It seems more respectful. They're more apt to help a neighbor ... I've always been kind of quaint."
[Associated
Press;
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