The realities of a futile campaign are portrayed in this novel of
the Vietnam War. The action ranges from the White House to the
jungle, from the American Embassy in Saigon to the front lines.
Michael Peterson has also written "The Immortal Dragon". If you're
looking for a Vietnam War novel, but you don't want to wade in too
deep, this is perfect lightweight fare. Think of it as a cross
between Tom Clancy and Graham Greene (see Orrin's review of The
Quiet American)with the civil servant as superhero trying to
navigate a moral cesspool. Bradley Lawrence Marshall is the blue
blood, war hero, diplomat who is sent to Vietnam as the personal
emissary of President Johnson, to find a way out. In country, he
meets with real figures like General Westmoreland, who tries to
convince him everything is copacetic. But he also meets folks like:
his driver, Corporal Mead, a decent though violent American lad of
ambiguous sexuality, who is sick of the war; Lacouture, a
flamboyant, Guy Burgess-like, Frenchman who sells information to
all sides and loves Mead; and the insidious CIA station chief,
Wilson Abbot Lord, who lives to fight the Communists and, fearing
that Marshall will end the war, plots to kill him. And it's all set
against the backdrop of the Tet Offensive. The whole premise, of
Johnson and a bureaucrat secretly planning an exit strategy,
doesn't withstand much scrutiny and the stereotypes and cliches run
rampant. But taken on its own terms, as a sort of politico-military
potboiler with only mild pretensions of addressing issues in any
serious way, it succeeds pretty well. It's certainly a more
diverting read than many of the more critically acclaimed novels of
the war.
General
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