0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
Price
  • R100 - R250 (70)
  • R250 - R500 (788)
  • R500+ (1,328)
  • -
Status
Format
Author / Contributor
Publisher

Books > Humanities > History > American history > From 1900

War Stories - A GI Reporter in Vietnam, 1970-1971 (Paperback): Conrad M Leighton War Stories - A GI Reporter in Vietnam, 1970-1971 (Paperback)
Conrad M Leighton
R813 R583 Discovery Miles 5 830 Save R230 (28%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

As a GI reporter for the 1st Air Cavalry Division in Vietnam, the author-""an enlisted man writing primarily for enlisted men""-chronicled the experiences of combat soldiers in newspaper and magazine articles. His stories gave the Army's version of events, sprinkled with human interest and humor. They include his observations and photos of jungle missions, life on firebases, struggles in the rear and his own survival as a harried frontline journalist. He also wrote almost daily letters home to his parents-personal dispatches filled with frank commentary and poignant, at times disturbing anecdotes. His stories and letters are combined here in chronological order, providing a richly detailed narrative of combat in Vietnam.

Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War - The End of the American Century (Paperback): David F. Schmitz Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War - The End of the American Century (Paperback)
David F. Schmitz
R870 Discovery Miles 8 700 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In Richard Nixon and the Vietnam War, accomplished foreign relations historian David F. Shmitz provides students of US history and the Vietnam era with an up-to-date analysis of Nixon's Vietnam policy in a brief and accessible book that addresses the main controversies of the Nixon years. President Richard Nixon's first presidential term oversaw the definitive crucible of the Vietnam War. Nixon came into office seeking the kind of decisive victory that had eluded President Johnson, and went about expanding the war, overtly and covertly, in order to uphold a policy of "containment," protect America's credibility, and defy the left's antiwar movement at home. Tactically, politically, Nixon's moves made sense. However, by 1971 the president was forced to significantly de-escalate the American presence and seek a negotiated end to the war, which is now accepted as an American defeat, and a resounding failure of American foreign relations. Schmitz addresses the main controversies of Nixon's Vietnam strategy, and in so doing manages to trace back the ways in which this most calculating and perceptive politician wound up resigning from office a fraud and failure. Finally, the book seeks to place the impact of Nixon's policies and decisions in the larger context of post-World War II American society, and analyzes the full costs of the Vietnam War that the nation feels to this day.

Detroit's Wartime Industry - Arsenal of Democracy (Paperback): Michael Wr Davis Detroit's Wartime Industry - Arsenal of Democracy (Paperback)
Michael Wr Davis
R626 R534 Discovery Miles 5 340 Save R92 (15%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Just as Detroit symbolizes the U.S. automobile industry, during World War II it also came to stand for all American industry's conversion from civilian goods to war material. The label "Arsenal of Democracy" was coined by Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt in a fireside chat radio broadcast on December 29, 1940, nearly a year before the United States formally entered the war. Here is the pictorial story of one Detroiter's unique leadership in the miraculous speed Detroit's mass-production capacity was shifted to output of tanks, trucks, guns, and airplanes to support America's victory and of the struggles of civilians on the home front.

The Hump - The 1st Battalion, 503rd Airborne Infantry, in the First Major Battle of the Vietnam War (Paperback): Al Conetto The Hump - The 1st Battalion, 503rd Airborne Infantry, in the First Major Battle of the Vietnam War (Paperback)
Al Conetto
R646 R495 Discovery Miles 4 950 Save R151 (23%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Operation Hump, the first major battle between the U.S. Army and the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces, took place November 5-9, 1965, in South Vietnam's War Zone D. Known as ""The Hump,"" it would change the nature of the war, escalating it from a hit-and-run guerrilla conflict to a bloody contest between Communist main force units and American commands of battalion size or larger. This memoir of an Operation Hump survivor begins with sequence of events leading up to the battle, from the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. Drawing on official Army documents and the recollections of fellow combatants, the author not only describes the battle in detail but explains the war's basis in fabrications at the highest levels of the U.S. government. His experiences with post-traumatic stress disorder after the war and his eventual return to Vietnam in the 1990s are included.

Stress Disorders Among Vietnam Veterans: Theory, Research (Paperback): Charles R. Figley Stress Disorders Among Vietnam Veterans: Theory, Research (Paperback)
Charles R. Figley
R1,436 Discovery Miles 14 360 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

First published in 1978. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

The My Lai Massacre in American History and Memory (Paperback, New Ed): Kendrick Oliver The My Lai Massacre in American History and Memory (Paperback, New Ed)
Kendrick Oliver
R642 Discovery Miles 6 420 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

On 16 March 1968, two US infantry companies entered a Vietnamese village and in the course of a single morning killed over 400 of its unarmed, unresisting inhabitants . . . This is the first book to examine the response of American society to the My Lai massacre and its ambiguous place in American national memory. Kendrick Oliver argues that the massacre revelations left many Americans untroubled. It was only when the soldiers most immediately responsible came to be tried that opposition to the conflict grew, for these prosecutions were regarded by supporters of the war as evidence that the national leaders no longer had the will to do what was necessary to win. Oliver goes on to show that, contrary to interpretations of the Vietnam conflict as an unhealed national trauma or wound, many Americans have assimilated the war and its violence rather too well, and they were able to do so even when that violence was most conspicuous and current. US soldiers have been presented as the conflict's principal victims, and this was true even in the case of My Lai. It was the American perpetrators of the massacre and not the Vietnamese they brutalized who became the central object of popular concern. Both the massacre and its reception reveal the problem of human empathy in conditions of a counter-revolutionary war - a war, moreover, that had always been fought for geopolitical credibility, not for the sake of the Vietnamese. This incisive enquiry into the moral history of the Vietnam war should be essential reading for all students of the conflict, as well as others interested in the war and its cultural legacies. -- .

New Perceptions of the Vietnam War - Essays on the War, the South Vietnamese Experience, the Diaspora and the Continuing Impact... New Perceptions of the Vietnam War - Essays on the War, the South Vietnamese Experience, the Diaspora and the Continuing Impact (Paperback)
Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen
R956 R688 Discovery Miles 6 880 Save R268 (28%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This international and interdisciplinary volume examines the Vietnam War from new perspectives including those of the Vietnamese diaspora, and explores the ways in which perceptions of the war have altered in recent years. It differs from other titles on the Vietnam War in that it acknowledges the South Vietnamese experience of the war, and encompasses the perspectives of the Vietnamese diaspora in the US, Australia and France, as well as the work of American, Australian and French historians. The war is reinterpreted and reassessed through the lens of history, politics, biography and literature. The effects of the Vietnam War outside the boundaries of the Vietnamese state are ongoing. The presence of substantial Vietnamese communities in countries that participated in the conflict is contributing to changing interpretations of the war. This volume provides new insights into the reconstruction and memorialization of the war by Vietnamese, American, Australian and French scholars, and contains twelve chapters grouped under "War and Politics", "Memorials and Commemoration", "War and Women's Writing", and "Identities and Legacies", covering South Vietnamese leadership and policies, women and civilians, veterans overseas, the involvement of smaller allies in the war such as Australia, accounts by US, Australian and South Vietnamese servicemen as well as those of Indigenous soldiers in the US and Australia, memorials and commemoration, and the legacy of war on individual lives, contemporary memories, and government policy.

The Redcatcher Express (Hardcover, Special ed.): Henry Mora The Redcatcher Express (Hardcover, Special ed.)
Henry Mora
R737 Discovery Miles 7 370 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Redcatcher Express is the author's Vietnam War memoirs. Drafted and sent to fight in the war, the author, a musician by trade, is thwarted in his attempt to get into an Army band. He ends up in a Recon Platoon of the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, where he endures the adversity of war. The situation worsens when he is assigned to be point man for Recon. At the forefront of battle, the author feels that he is losing his senses. His prayers are answered when a reporter for the Stars and Stripes writes a story about his musical past. The Commanding General of the 199th reads the story and requests that the author assemble a combo to entertain the troops and raise the morale. The author organizes the Redcatcher Express and the band, made up of American GIs, becomes popular with the troops. He later discovers that raising the morale is instrumental in increasing the enemy body count in the 199th's war campaign. The body count of Vietcong was the centerpiece of the American approach to waging the war, conducted through search and destroy missions in remote jungle regions. Federation of American Scientists Military Analysis Network

Vietnam War Slang - A Dictionary on Historical Principles (Hardcover): Tom Dalzell Vietnam War Slang - A Dictionary on Historical Principles (Hardcover)
Tom Dalzell
R4,070 Discovery Miles 40 700 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In 2014, the US marks the 50th anniversary of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, the basis for the Johnson administration s escalation of American military involvement in Southeast Asia and war against North Vietnam. "Vietnam War Slang "outlines the context behind the slang used by members of the United States Armed Forces during the Vietnam War.

Troops facing and inflicting death display a high degree of linguistic creativity. Vietnam was the last American war fought by an army with conscripts, and their involuntary participation in the war added a dimension to the language. War has always been an incubator for slang; it is brutal, and brutality demands a vocabulary to describe what we don t encounter in peacetime civilian life. Furthermore, such language serves to create an intense bond between comrades in the armed forces, helping them to support the heavy burdens of war.

The troops in Vietnam faced the usual demands of war, as well as several that were unique to Vietnam a murky political basis for the war, widespread corruption in the ruling government, untraditional guerilla warfare, an unpredictable civilian population in Vietnam, and a growing lack of popular support for the war back in the US. For all these reasons, the language of those who fought in Vietnam was a vivid reflection of life in wartime.

"

Vietnam War Slang "lays out the definitive record of the lexicon of Americans who fought in the Vietnam War. Assuming no prior knowledge, it presents around 2000 headwords, with each entry divided into sections giving parts of speech, definitions, glosses, the countries of origin, dates of earliest known citations, and citations. It will be an essential resource for Vietnam veterans and their families, students and readers of history, and anyone interested in the principles underpinning the development of slang. "

Vietnam War Slang - A Dictionary on Historical Principles (Paperback): Tom Dalzell Vietnam War Slang - A Dictionary on Historical Principles (Paperback)
Tom Dalzell
R1,175 Discovery Miles 11 750 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In 2014, the US marks the 50th anniversary of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, the basis for the Johnson administration s escalation of American military involvement in Southeast Asia and war against North Vietnam. "Vietnam War Slang "outlines the context behind the slang used by members of the United States Armed Forces during the Vietnam War.

Troops facing and inflicting death display a high degree of linguistic creativity. Vietnam was the last American war fought by an army with conscripts, and their involuntary participation in the war added a dimension to the language. War has always been an incubator for slang; it is brutal, and brutality demands a vocabulary to describe what we don t encounter in peacetime civilian life. Furthermore, such language serves to create an intense bond between comrades in the armed forces, helping them to support the heavy burdens of war.

The troops in Vietnam faced the usual demands of war, as well as several that were unique to Vietnam a murky political basis for the war, widespread corruption in the ruling government, untraditional guerilla warfare, an unpredictable civilian population in Vietnam, and a growing lack of popular support for the war back in the US. For all these reasons, the language of those who fought in Vietnam was a vivid reflection of life in wartime.

"

Vietnam War Slang "lays out the definitive record of the lexicon of Americans who fought in the Vietnam War. Assuming no prior knowledge, it presents around 2000 headwords, with each entry divided into sections giving parts of speech, definitions, glosses, the countries of origin, dates of earliest known citations, and citations. It will be an essential resource for Vietnam veterans and their families, students and readers of history, and anyone interested in the principles underpinning the development of slang. "

Rice Wars in Colonial Vietnam - The Great Famine and the Viet Minh Road to Power (Hardcover): Geoffrey C. Gunn Rice Wars in Colonial Vietnam - The Great Famine and the Viet Minh Road to Power (Hardcover)
Geoffrey C. Gunn
R3,179 Discovery Miles 31 790 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book offers the first detailed English-language examination of the Great Vietnamese Famine of 1945, which left at least a million dead, and links it persuasively to the largely unexpected Viet Minh seizure of power only months later. Drawing on extensive research in French archives, Geoffrey C. Gunn offers an important new interpretation of Japanese-Vichy French wartime economic exploitation of Vietnam's agricultural potential. He analyzes successes and failures of French colonial rice programs and policies from the early 1900s to 1945, drawing clear connections between colonialism and agrarian unrest in the 1930s and the rise of the Viet Minh in the 1940s. Gunn asks whether the famine signaled a loss of the French administration's "mandate of heaven," or whether the overall dire human condition was the determining factor in facilitating communist victory in August 1945. In the broader sweep of Vietnamese history, including the rise of the communist party, the picture that emerges is not only one of local victimhood at the hands of outsiders-French and, in turn, Japanese- but the enormous agency on the part of the Vietnamese themselves to achieve moral victory over injustice against all odds, no matter how controversial, tragic, and contested the outcome. As the author clearly demonstrates, colonial-era development strategies and contests also had their postwar sequels in the "American war," just as land, land reform, and subsistence-sustainable development issues persist into the present.

Fighting Shadows in Vietnam - A Combat Memoir (Paperback): Michael P. Jr. Moynihan Fighting Shadows in Vietnam - A Combat Memoir (Paperback)
Michael P. Jr. Moynihan
R641 R476 Discovery Miles 4 760 Save R165 (26%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Set as deeply in his mind as in the depths of the Southeast-Asian jungle, a young American soldier embarks on an evocative journey to a war that, for him, will never be over. I am that American soldier. It's 1969. 18 and living in New York City the world was a playground for Mickey, a naive Irish-American kid bored with his life who felt he was ready for the adventures of war. His father served in World War II, his brother a Marine in Vietnam it was now his turn. His 365 days, in the hell that was Vietnam, builds in torment until an attack on a bunker complex in Cambodia where everything goes terribly wrong. Wounded, his friend captured, he becomes a tormented survivor knowing he is always just a heartbeat away from death. His adventure turned nightmare brings a visceral understanding of the words penned by Thoreau, those very same words with which his father imparted enduring wisdom throughout his youth: ""Most men live lives of quiet desperation,"" especially those at war. This emotional journey of self-realisation chronicles the key perspective-shaping experiences of a U.S. Army grunt fighting in Vietnam.

Vietnam War Nurses - Personal Accounts of 18 Americans (Paperback): Patricia Rushton Vietnam War Nurses - Personal Accounts of 18 Americans (Paperback)
Patricia Rushton
R611 R474 Discovery Miles 4 740 Save R137 (22%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Eighteen nurses who served in the United States military nurse corps during the Vietnam War present their personal accounts in this book. They represent all military branches and both genders. They served in the theater of combat, in the United States, and in countries allied with the U.S. They served in front line hospitals, hospital ships, large medical centers and small clinics. They speak of caring for casualties during a conflict filled with controversy. They speak of patriotism, belief in a greater power, the gaining of knowledge about the nursing profession and about themselves, of persecution and discrimination, of travel and the adventure of friendship and love.

Ghosts and Shadows - A Marine in Vietnam, 1968-1969 (Paperback): Phil Ball Ghosts and Shadows - A Marine in Vietnam, 1968-1969 (Paperback)
Phil Ball
R642 R476 Discovery Miles 4 760 Save R166 (26%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

On November 8, 1967, the author arrived at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego, ill-prepared for the training and abuse that awaited him in boot camp. At the time, he would have done anything to escape; only upon reflection years later did he realize that the self-confidence instilled in him by his drill instructors had probably saved his life in Vietnam. A few months after boot camp, Private Ball was shipped out to Vietnam, joining F Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines, near Khe Sanh. As an infantryman, a grunt in the vernacular of the Corps, Ball, like the other youths of F Company, did a very difficult and deadly job in such places as the A Shau Valley, Leatherneck Square, the DMZ and other obscure but critical I Corps locales. His--their--fear of death mingled with homesickness. Little did they realize that the horrors of the Vietnam War--horrors that while in-country they often claimed did not even exist--would haunt them for the rest of their lives.

The Human Tradition in the Vietnam Era (Paperback): David L Anderson The Human Tradition in the Vietnam Era (Paperback)
David L Anderson
R1,038 Discovery Miles 10 380 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Vietnam War was an immense national tragedy that played itself out in the individual experiences of millions of Americans. The conflict tested and tormented the country collectively and individually in ways few historical events have. The Human Tradition in the Vietnam Era provides window into some of those personal journeys through that troubled time. The poor and the powerful, male and female, hawk and dove, civilian and military, are all here. This rich collection of original biographical essays provides contemporary readers with a sense of what it was like to be an American in the 1960s and early 1970s, while also helping them gain an understanding of some of the broader issues of the era. The diverse biographies included in this book put a human face on the tensions and travails of the Vietnam Era. Students will gain a better understanding of how individuals looked at and lived through this contro-versial conflict in American history.

Macv - The Joint Command in the Years of Withdrawal, 1968-1973 (United States Army in Vietnam series) (Hardcover): Graham A.... Macv - The Joint Command in the Years of Withdrawal, 1968-1973 (United States Army in Vietnam series) (Hardcover)
Graham A. Cosmas, U.S. Army Center of Military History
R1,141 Discovery Miles 11 410 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

With FULL COLOR maps and illustrations. CMH 91-7-1. United States Army in Vietnam. 2nd of two volumes that examine the Vietnam conflict from the perspective of the theater commander and his headquarters. Traces the story of the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), from the Communist Tet offensive of early 1968 through the disestablishment of MACV in March 1973. Deals with theater-level command relationships, strategy, and operations.

America in Vietnam - The War That Couldn't Be Won (Paperback): Herbert Y. Schandler America in Vietnam - The War That Couldn't Be Won (Paperback)
Herbert Y. Schandler
R1,007 Discovery Miles 10 070 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This controversial and timely book about the American experience in Vietnam provides the first full exploration of the perspectives of the North Vietnamese leadership before, during, and after the war. Herbert Y. Schandler offers unique insights into the mindsets of the North Vietnamese and their response to diplomatic and military actions of the Americans, laying out the full scale of the disastrous U.S. political and military misunderstandings of Vietnamese history and motivations. Including frank quotes from Vietnamese leaders, the book offers important new knowledge that allows us to learn invaluable lessons from the perspective of a victorious enemy. Unlike most military officers who served in Vietnam, Schandler is convinced the war was unwinnable, no matter how long America stayed the course or how many resources were devoted to it. He is remarkably qualified to make these judgments as an infantry commander during the Vietnam War, a Pentagon policymaker, and a scholar who taught at West Point and National Defense University. His extensive personal interviews with North Vietnamese are drawn from his many trips to Hanoi after the war. Schandler provides not only a definitive analysis of the American failure in Vietnam but a crucial foundation for exploring the potential for success in the current guerrilla wars the United States is fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Bring the War Home - The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America (Paperback): Kathleen Belew Bring the War Home - The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America (Paperback)
Kathleen Belew
R554 R480 Discovery Miles 4 800 Save R74 (13%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A Guardian Best Book of the Year "A gripping study of white power...Explosive." -New York Times "Helps explain how we got to today's alt-right." -Terry Gross, Fresh Air The white power movement in America wants a revolution. Returning to a country ripped apart by a war they felt they were not allowed to win, a small group of Vietnam veterans and disgruntled civilians who shared their virulent anti-communism and potent sense of betrayal concluded that waging war on their own country was justified. The command structure of their covert movement gave women a prominent place. They operated with discipline, made tragic headlines in Waco, Ruby Ridge, and Oklahoma City, and are resurgent under President Trump. Based on a decade of deep immersion in previously classified FBI files and on extensive interviews, Bring the War Home tells the story of American paramilitarism and the birth of the alt-right. "A much-needed and troubling revelation... The power of Belew's book comes, in part, from the fact that it reveals a story about white-racist violence that we should all already know." -The Nation "Fascinating... Shows how hatred of the federal government, fears of communism, and racism all combined in white-power ideology and explains why our responses to the movement have long been woefully inadequate." -Slate "Superbly comprehensive...supplants all journalistic accounts of America's resurgent white supremacism." -Pankaj Mishra, The Guardian

Southeast Asia and the Vietnam War (Paperback): Cheng Guan Ang Southeast Asia and the Vietnam War (Paperback)
Cheng Guan Ang
R1,669 Discovery Miles 16 690 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book describes and explains Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore s attitudes and policies regarding the Vietnam War. While it is generally known that all three countries supported the US war effort in Vietnam, it reveals the motivations behind the decisions of the decision makers, the twists and turns and the nuances in the attitudes of Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore following the development of the war from the 1950s through to its end in 1975. Although the principal focus is the three supposedly non-aligned countries - Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, the perspectives of Thailand and the Philippines - the two Southeast Asian countries which were formally allied with the United States - are discussed at the appropriate junctures. It makes an original contribution to the gradually growing literature on the international history of the Vietnam War and furthers our knowledge of the diplomatic history of Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore in the early independent years, 1945/1949, 1957 and 1965 respectively, which coincided with early years of the Cold War in Southeast Asia.

The U.S. Army Infantryman Vietnam Pocket Manual (Hardcover): Chris McNab The U.S. Army Infantryman Vietnam Pocket Manual (Hardcover)
Chris McNab
R445 R370 Discovery Miles 3 700 Save R75 (17%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Between 1964 and 1975, 2.6 million American personnel served within the borders of South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, of whom an estimated 1-1.6 million actually fought in combat. At the tip of the spear were the infantry, the "grunts" who entered an extraordinary tropical combat zone completely alien to the world they had left behind in the United States. In South Vietnam, and occasionally spilling over into neighboring Laos and Cambodia, they fought a relentless counterinsurgency and conventional war against the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) and Viet Cong (VC). The terrain was as challenging as the enemy - soaring mountains or jungle-choked valleys; bleached, sandy coastal zones; major urban centers; riverine districts. Their opponents fought them with relentless and terrible ingenuity, on a daily basis with ambushes, booby traps, and mines, then occasionally with full-force offensives on a scale to rival the campaigns of World War II. This pocket manual draws its content not only from essential U.S. military field manuals of the Vietnam era, but also a vast collection of declassified primary documents, including rare after-action reports, intelligence analysis, first-hand accounts, and combat studies. Through these documents the pocket manual provides a deep insight into what it was like for infantry to live, survive, and fight in Vietnam, whether conducting a major airmobile search-and-destroy operation or conducting endless hot and humid small-unit patrols from jungle firebases. The book includes infantry intelligence documents about the NVA and VC threats, plus chapters explaining hard-won lessons about using weaponry, surviving and moving through the jungle, tactical maneuvers, and applications of the ubiquitous helicopter for combat and support.

And Bring the Darkness Home - The Tony Dell Story (Hardcover): Greg Milam And Bring the Darkness Home - The Tony Dell Story (Hardcover)
Greg Milam; As told to Tony Dell
R502 Discovery Miles 5 020 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

And Bring the Darkness Home is a haunting exploration of how the mental scars of war destroyed an international cricket career, tore a family apart and left destitute a man who seemed to have it all. Tony Dell was the only Test cricketer to fight in the Vietnam War. His journey to the summit of the game, playing for Australia against England in the Ashes, was as unlikely and meteoric as any in cricket history. His descent was painful and harrowing. It was in his mid-60s, living in his mother's garage, that he learned the truth about what had led him on a path of self-destruction. A diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder allowed him to piece together the ruins of his life and also to search for answers, for himself and the thousands of other sufferers. The restlessness and urgency that once drove him to the top of the game was turned on authorities who refused to learn the lessons from history. PTSD robbed Tony Dell of memories of his playing career and left a palpable sense of loss. It also gave him a life-changing mission.

Chemical Warfare during the Vietnam War - Riot Control Agents in Combat (Hardcover): D. Hank Ellison Chemical Warfare during the Vietnam War - Riot Control Agents in Combat (Hardcover)
D. Hank Ellison
R4,075 Discovery Miles 40 750 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Chemical Warfare during the Vietnam War documents the use of antipersonnel chemical weapons throughout the Vietnam War, and explores their effectiveness under the wide variety of circumstances in which they were employed. The short, readable account follows the US program as it progressed from a focus on the humanitarian aspects of non-lethal weapons to their use as a means of augmenting and enhancing the lethality of traditional munitions. It also presents the efforts of the North Vietnamese to both counter US chemical operations and to develop a chemical capability of their own. Chemical Warfare during the Vietnam War is a comprehensive and thoroughly fascinating examination of riot-control agents during the Vietnam War.

SOG Knives and More from America's War in Southeast Asia (Hardcover): Michael W Silvey SOG Knives and More from America's War in Southeast Asia (Hardcover)
Michael W Silvey
R1,032 R807 Discovery Miles 8 070 Save R225 (22%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This guide showcases knives used by America's clandestine military in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. It provides the collector and others interested in the period a way of identifying honest SOG (Studies and Observations Group) specimens and separating them from counterfeits. With beautiful color photographs that show a high level of detail, the book identifies all known SOG specimens (over 165 knives) and includes rare personalized knives and custom combat knives made in the United States. Sections of the book focus on Randalls, Eks, Gerbers, and the knives made by tribal artisans in Southeast Asia. This is the eighth in Mike Silvey's series on military knives.

Blessings - Transforming My Vietnam Experience (Paperback): Don Yost Blessings - Transforming My Vietnam Experience (Paperback)
Don Yost
R567 Discovery Miles 5 670 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Vietnam veteran Don Yost explores the pain and rage of his experience as a correspondent near Mai Laid in 1968, transforming it through writing to a elegaic and powerful memoir, imbued with a significant message for our time.

From Melos to My Lai - A Study in Violence, Culture and Social Survival (Hardcover): Lawrence A. Tritle From Melos to My Lai - A Study in Violence, Culture and Social Survival (Hardcover)
Lawrence A. Tritle
R4,723 Discovery Miles 47 230 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Did Ajax and Achilles ever suffer from Post-traumatic stress syndrome?


In this absorbing account, Vietnam veteran and classics scholar Lawrence A Tritle offers an incisive analysis of war and its impact upon the soldier and civilian from the classical age to the present day.
Tritle discusses the links between battlefield experiences that affect the participants and victims of war in every age, drawing examples from sources as diverse as the Iliad, Michael Herr's Dispatches, Thucydides' account of the Pelopenesian Wars, and the Oliver Stone film Platoon. Each instance sheds light on some of the most puzzling phemonena of war and shows how the heroes of epic responded to battle with their own forms of "shellshock," battle-madness and bonding. Tritle examines such issues as:


How can ordinarily decent men can commit acts of extraordinary savagery?


Attitudes toward the "enemy"


The impact of war on waiting wives, lovers and civilian bystanders


Remembering the fallen soldier: from the classic Athenian funeral speech to the Vietnam Wall


How veterans live with physical and psychological injury


This memorable book is for readers who wonder about the meaning and experience of battle, about the impact of war and violence on our culture, and for anyone interested in the culture of ancient Greece.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
A Rock in the Clouds - A Life Revisited
Us Army (Ret ) Col Joseph Tedeschi Hardcover R602 Discovery Miles 6 020
Letters from the Southern Home Front…
Joseph A. Fry Hardcover R1,672 Discovery Miles 16 720
Red Markers - The Rest of the Story
Gary Willis Hardcover R1,358 R1,136 Discovery Miles 11 360
The Vietnam War
Mark Atwood Lawrence Hardcover R625 Discovery Miles 6 250
The Secret War Against Hanoi
Richard H. Shultz Paperback R477 R413 Discovery Miles 4 130
Meridian Township
Jane M Rose Paperback R625 R533 Discovery Miles 5 330
Vietnam War - Pathology 1967-8-Capt…
Captain Anton P Sohn Hardcover R636 Discovery Miles 6 360
A Soldier's Heart - The 3 Wars of…
Raynold A Gauvin Hardcover R884 R748 Discovery Miles 7 480
Last Men Out - The True Story of…
Bob Drury, Tom Clavin Paperback R491 R423 Discovery Miles 4 230
The Mountains Sing - Runner-up for the…
Que Mai Nguyen Phan Paperback R305 R256 Discovery Miles 2 560

 

Partners