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Books > Humanities > History > American history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945 > Vietnam War
 |
Know Me
(Paperback)
Nancy Curci
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R380
R332
Discovery Miles 3 320
Save R48 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A Vietnam War combat memoir from the perspective of an
artilleryman.Impact Zone documents Marine First Lieutenant James S.
Brown's intense battle experiences, including those at Khe Sanh and
Con Thien, throughout his thirteen months of service on the DMZ
during 1967-68. This high-action account also reflects Brown's
growing belief that the Vietnam War was mis-fought due to the
unproductive political leadership of President Johnson and his
administration. Brown's naivetE developed into hardening skepticism
and cynicism as he faced the harsh realities of war, though he
still managed to retain a sense of honor, pride, and patriotism for
his country. Impact Zone is a distinctive book on the Vietnam War
because it is told from the perspective of an artilleryman, and the
increasingly dangerous events gain momentum as they progress from
one adventure to the next. Impact Zone is not only an important
historical document of the Vietnam conflict, but also a moving
record of the personal and emotional costs of war.
**The New York Times Bestseller**
**The book of the landmark documentary, The Vietnam War, by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick**
The definitive work on the Vietnam War, the conflict that came to define a generation, told from all sides by those who were there.
More than forty years after the Vietnam War ended, its legacy continues to fascinate, horrify and inform us. As the first war to be fought in front of TV cameras and beamed around the world, it has been immortalised on film and on the page, and forever changed the way we think about war.
Drawing on hundreds of brand new interviews, Ken Burns and Geoffrey C. Ward have created the definitive work on Vietnam. It is the first book to show us the war from every perspective: from idealistic US Marines and the families they left behind to the Vietnamese civilians, both North and South, whose homeland was changed for ever; politicians, POWs and anti-war protesters; and the photographers and journalists who risked their lives to tell the truth. The book sends us into the grit and chaos of combat, while also expertly outlining the complex chain of political events that led America to Vietnam.
Beautifully written, this essential work tells the full story without taking sides and reminds us that there is no single truth in war. It is set to redefine our understanding of a brutal conflict, to launch provocative new debates and to shed fresh light on the price paid in ‘blood and bone’ by Vietnamese and Americans alike.
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