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Books > Humanities > History > American history > From 1900
This oral history of the air war in Vietnam includes the stories of
more than thirty pilots who all had one thing in common-after
returning from Southeast Asia and separating from the service, they
were hired as pilots by Western Airlines. As the chapters begin,
Bruce Cowee tells his story and introduces us to each pilot. The
interesting theme is that all of these men served in Southeast Asia
and in most cases never knew each other until they came home and
went to work for Western Airlines. Each of the pilots featured in
this book is the real thing, and in an age of so many "Wannabees,"
it is reassuring to know that each of them was a pilot for Western
Airlines and someone who Bruce worked with or knew professionally.
The stories span a 9 year period, 1964 - 1973, and cover every
aspect of the Air War in Southeast Asia. These 33 men represent
only a small fraction of the Vietnam veterans hired as pilots by
Western Airlines, but this book pays tribute to all of them.
"Damn you Rolly, you succeeded in taking me back to Vinh Long and
Advisory Team 68, after a more than 40 year absence. I thank you
for honoring all who served, but especially patriots like Bob Olson
and Walt Gutowski, Army guys... that I knew well. They were great
men whose spirit and professionalism you captured well. I highly
recommend the book..." Mike Paluda, Michigan COLONEL, USA, RET.
"Rolly Kidder has delivered a brilliant chronicle of the Vietnam
conflict with which many may not be familiar. Forty years later, he
revisits Vietnam and tracks down the families of three men who had
been killed... Kidder's recounting of his visits with the families
of the three servicemen is a poignant reminder of the continuing
grief and pride extant amongst many and is a fitting memorial to
the Army and Riverine heroes and an honor to those who mourn them."
Captain, M.B. Connolly, USN (retired) COMMANDER, RIVER ASSAULT
DIVISION 132 RIVER ASSAULT SQUADRON 13, 1969-70
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More Than A Few Good Men tells the compelling soldiers story of
Robert J. Driver's life from childhood to his retirement from the
United States Marine Corps. Driver witnessed and was part of many
extreme, and sometimes chilling, events. These actions come to life
through Driver's own letters home to his wife, encompassing the
challenge of boot camp, Officer's Candidate School, and his tours
of duty in the Vietnam War. Driver collected declassified documents
and information from many of the Marines he served with in Vietnam
in order to provide the reader with this exceptionally detailed
account. Driver's letters home offer a clear reckoning of the
traumatic events of combat and the bravery of his young Marines.
The book also features biographies of the many contributors.
Driver's admiration for the men he fought with is evident-they were
More Than A Few Good Men.
This book addresses the problem of a country telling a grand
narrative to itself that does not hold up under closer examination,
a narrative that leads to possibly avoidable war. In particular,
the book explains and questions the narrative the United States was
telling itself about East Asia and the Pacific in the late 1930s,
with (in retrospect) the Pacific War only a few years away. Through
empirical methods, it details how the standard narrative failed to
understand what was really happening based on documents that later
became available. The documents researched are from the Diet
Library in Japan, the Foreign Office in London, the National
Archives in Washington, the University of Hawai'i library in
Honolulu and several other primary sources. This research reveals
opportunities unexplored that involve lessons of seeing things from
the "other side's" point of view and of valuing the contribution of
"in-between" people who tried to be peacemakers. The crux of the
standard narrative was that the United States, unlike European
imperialist powers, involved itself in East Asia in order to bring
openness (the Open Door) and democracy; and that it was
increasingly confronted by an opposing force, Japan, that had
imperial, closed, and undemocratic designs. This standard American
narrative was later opposed by a revisionist narrative that found
the United States culpable of a "neo-imperialism," just as the
European powers and Japan were guilty of "imperialism." However,
what West Across the Pacific shows is that, while there is
indubitably some truth in both the "standard" and the "revisionist"
versions, more careful documentary research reveals that the most
important thing "lost" in the1898-1941 period may have been the
real opportunity for mutual recognition and understanding, for
cooler heads and more neutral "realistic" policies to emerge; and
for more attention to the standpoint of the common men and women
caught up in the migrations of the period. West Across the Pacific
is both a contribution to peace research in history and to a
foreign policy guided modestly by empiricism and realism as the
most reliable method. It is a must read for diplomats and people
concerned about diplomacy, as it probes the microcosms of
diplomatic negotiations. This brings special relevance and
approachability as yet another generation of Americans returns from
war and occupation in Iraq. The book also speaks to Vietnam
veterans, by drawing lessons from the Japanese war in China for the
American war in Vietnam. This is particularly true of the
conclusion, co-authored by distinguished Vietnam specialist Sophie
Quinn-Judge.
Winner of the Overseas Press Club's Cornelius J. Ryan Award for Best Nonfiction Book, the Commonwealth Club of California's Gold Medal for Nonfiction, and the PEN Center West Award for Best Research Nonfiction Twenty-five years after the end of the Vietnam War, historian and journalist A. J. Langguth delivers an authoritative account of the war based on official documents not available earlier and on new reporting from both the American and Vietnamese perspectives. In Our Vietnam, Langguth takes us inside the waffling and deceitful White Houses of Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon; documents the ineptness and corruption of our South Vietnamese allies; and recounts the bravery of soldiers on both sides of the war. With its broad sweep and keen insights, Our Vietnam brings together the kaleidoscopic events and personalities of the war into one engrossing and unforgettable narrative.
At the height of WWI, history's most lethal influenza virus erupted
in an army camp in Kansas, moved east with American troops, then
exploded, killing as many as 100 million people worldwide. It
killed more people in twenty-four months than AIDS killed in
twenty-four years, more in a year than the Black Death killed in a
century. But this was not the Middle Ages, and 1918 marked the
first collision of science and epidemic disease. Magisterial in its
breadth of perspective and depth of research and now revised to
reflect the growing danger of the avian flu, "The Great Influenza"
is ultimately a tale of triumph amid tragedy, which provides us
with a precise and sobering model as we confront the epidemics
looming on our own horizon. John M Barry has written a new
afterword for this edition that brings us up to speed on the
terrible threat of the avian flu and suggests ways in which we
might head off another flu pandemic.
The Vietnam War left wounds that have taken three decades to
heal-indeed some scars remain even today. In A Time for Peace,
prominent American historian Robert D. Schulzinger sheds light on
how deeply etched memories of this devastating conflict have
altered America's political, social, and cultural landscape.
Schulzinger examines the impact of the war from many angles. He
traces the long, twisted, and painful path of reconciliation with
Vietnam, the heated controversy over soldiers who were missing in
action and how it resulted in years of false hope for military
families, and the outcry over Maya Lin's design for the Vietnam
Memorial in Washington. In addition, the book examines the influx
of over a million Vietnam refugees and Amerasian children into the
US and describes the plight of Vietnam veterans, many of whom
returned home alienated, unhappy, and unappreciated, though some
led productive post-war lives. Schulzinger looks at how the
controversies of the war have continued to be fought in books and
films, ranging from novels such as Going After Cacciato and Paco's
Story to such movies as The Green Berets (directed by and starring
John Wayne), The Deer Hunter, Apocalypse Now, and Rambo. Perhaps
most important, the author explores the power of the Vietnam
metaphor on foreign policy, particularly in Central America,
Somalia, the Gulf War, and the war in Iraq. We see how the
"lessons" of the war have been reinterpreted by different ends of
the political spectrum. Using a vast array of sources-from
government documents to memoirs, film, and fiction-A Time for Peace
provides an illuminating account of a war that still looms large in
the American imagination.
Investigative reporter Patrick J. Sloyan, a former member of the
White House Press Corps, revisits the last years of John F.
Kennedy's presidency, his fateful involvement with Diem's
assassination, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Civil Rights
Movement. Using recently released White House tape recordings and
interviews with key inside players, The Politics of Deception
reveals: The Politics of Deception is a fresh and revealing look at
an iconic president and the way he attempted to manage public
opinion and forge his legacy, sure to appeal to both history buffs
and those who were alive during his presidency.
"Fight of the Phoenix" is a historical personal account of
duties as an Advisor in the Delta of Vietnam in 1972. The author
counters claims of other Advisors and Academics and sets the record
straight on the vicious nature of the Communist insurgency that
killed their own people and the spectacular success of the Phoenix
Program throughout the country and especially in the Delta Region
MR-4 in targeting and neutralizing the enemy Viet Cong
insurgents.
There has been recent controversy in the African American community
about youth and their lack of appreciation for the gains of the
civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. This stellar
biography is a superb introduction to the foremost leader of the
civil rights movement. The story and historical context will be
eye-opening for students and a good refresher for others who are
too young to have remembered the events. In a gripping narrative
style, the biography traces the young Martin, the son and grandson
of formidable preachers, to his calling as a minister too, but one
who would take on the entrenched racism of the South, and North,
through a nonviolent movement that changed the course of American
history. There has been recent controversy in the African American
community about youth and their lack of appreciation for the gains
of the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. This stellar
biography is a superb introduction to the foremost leader of the
civil rights movement. The story and historical context will be
eye-opening for students and a good refresher for others who are
too young to have remembered the events. In a gripping narrative
style, the biography traces the young Martin, the son and grandson
of formidable preachers, to his calling as a minister too, but one
who would take on the entrenched racism of the South, and North,
through a nonviolent movement that changed the course of American
history. King's story is compelling, starting from his early
nurtured family life in an insular community of blacks in Atlanta.
His education at Morehouse College, Crozer Theological Seminary,
and Boston University and courtship of Coretta Scott lead into the
early days of the civil rights movement and King's leadership role
in the major marches, demonstrations, boycotts, and sit-ins that
took place, mainly in the South. Critical insight into the Kennedy
and Johnson Administrations is given as King negotiates with the
presidents for equal rights for blacks. The violent reactions
against and hatred of many whites for those seeking racial justice
are still shocking today. Against the backdrop of beatings,
killings, bombings, threats, and imprisoning, King is portrayed as
driven to lift up all Americans, even if it meant martyrdom.
This is a fascinating and hard-hitting account kept in the journal
of a young Marine Corps infantryman during his tour of duty in the
Vietnam War. The epilogue follows the author back to Vietnam in the
1990's.
For those with a vivid memory of the Vietnam war, there is
consolation in knowing that the impact of that war altered and
shaped politics and warfare for the next generations. But in that
altering we must take the lessons and apply them to new situations,
new challenges and new policy dilemmas. To fail to do so would mean
that the warriors at Khe Sanh and all of Vietnam were truly
expendable, The battle of Khe Sanh was won and the Vietnam war was
lost at the same time. Expendable Warriors describes at multiple
levels the soldiers and marines who were expendable in the American
political chaos of Vietnam, 1968. On January 21, 1968, nine days
before the Tet offensive, tens of thousands of North Vietnamese
regulars began the attacks on the Khe Sanh plateau, which led to
the siege of the Khe Sanh Combat Base. Gen. Westmoreland was fully
aware that the North Vietnamese would attack but he declined to
alert or warn the small unit of American soldiers and marines
serving at Khe Sanh in an advisory capacity, considering them
expendable in the greater strategy. Not just an analysis of the
battle, Expendable Warriors also ponders the question of how to win
an unpopular war on foreign soil, linking battlefield events to
political reality.
The book starts out picturing a young man who foolishly wants to
go to war where he in vision's himself receiving all these high
class medals for heroism but never once taking into account what it
is going to take physically and mentally to get those medals. He's
constantly playing a head game within himself and those that
surround him. He like so many other young men of past eras are
trying to be something that they're not and that small initial lie
grows into a tremendous reputation that he has to live with and
soon regrets that he's known by such. Come walk with the author and
his brothers of the sword through the dark, humid, unforgiving
jungles of Vietnam and experience the death, destruction, and
mental sacrificial anguish they had to endure. Come see why you
fear being alone in the denseness of a jungle or a forest that you
have never entered before. Feel the heat of the Asian jungle floor
intermixed with the leaches, ants, mosquitoes, snakes and humans
searching you out only to destroy you at any cost. You see our
author starts out innocently enough but soon finds out that war is
not only a physical hardship demanding its pounds of flesh, but
also is a horrendous mental agonizing hazard from which there is
only one means of escape and/or retreat. That means to an end is
death. Yes the author and his brothers of the sword will take their
heroic missions and sacrificial allegiances to the grave with them.
But, the real tragedy of it all is no one really cares about them
in the first place. For they were and still are the "Secret
Soldiers of the Second Army" willing to go anywhere, any time, to
do the impossible for the ungrateful.
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