Historian
Stephen Ambrose drew heavily from Webster's unpublished memoirs while writing his 1992 book
Band of Brothers. Through Ambrose's influence, the memoirs were published by the Louisiana State University Press in 1994 as ''Parachute Infantry: An American Paratrooper's Memoir of D-Day and the Fall of the Third Reich
. The book received critical acclaim, with The New York Times calling it "gutsy, sometimes bemused and sometimes angry," and Booklist'' saying that "Webster achieves a perfectly pitched, Sad Sack sarcasm that is an authentic witness to the combat experience." Writing in the
Chicago Tribune in 1994, reviewer Patrick T. Reardon wrote that
Parachute Infantry "stands out among the forest of other books" appearing on the 50th anniversary of D-Day. Webster, he wrote, described "a war of complexity and ambiguity, far removed from the simplicity of slogans and propaganda," which was necessary "because the Nazis had to be stopped because they were killing millions of innocent people." Webster "also saw his fellow American soldiers shoot unarmed, wounded German prisoners." Webster also described how he was "ecstatic" that he received a "
million-dollar wound" that would get him out of combat without permanently disabling him. Reardon wrote that such "gritty honesty" was not what publishers were seeking after the war, and prevented Webster from finding a publisher during his lifetime. The episode "The Last Patrol" is told from Webster's character's point of view. After Webster's death, the Taft School established the David Kenyon Webster Prize for Excellence in Writing, given yearly to one of its students. ==See also==