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Books > History > World history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
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Honor Bound - The History of American Prisoners of War in Southeast Asia, 1961-1973 (Paperback)
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Honor Bound - The History of American Prisoners of War in Southeast Asia, 1961-1973 (Paperback)
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The story of American prisoners of war in Southeast Asia has never
been fully told despite numerous popular accounts, personal
memoirs, and official reports that have appeared over the years
since the prisoners' release in 1973. Now, twenty-five years after
Operation Homecoming, comes the first attempt at a comprehensive,
objective, documented history of their experience that seeks to
separate fact from fiction and to portray the full scope of the
captivity from the perspective of both captive and captor. Honor
Bound, a collaborative effort researched and written over the
course of more than a decade by historian Stuart Rochester and Air
Force Academy professor and POW specialist Frederick Kiley,
combines rigorous scholarly analysis with a moving narrative to
record in unprecedented detail the triumphs and tragedies of the
several hundred servicemen (and civilians) who fought their own
special war in North and South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia between
1961 and 1973. The authors address a gamut of subjects from the
physical ordeal of torture and deprivation that required
clarification of the Code of Conduct to the sometimes more onerous
psychological challenges of indoctrination, adjustments to new
routines and relationships, and mere coping and passing time under
the most monotonous, inhospitable conditions. The volume weaves a
winding trail through scores of prison camps, from large concrete
compounds in the North to isolated jungle stockades in the South to
mountain caves in Laos, while tracing political developments in
Hanoi and Washington and the evolution of the "psywar" that placed
the prisoners at the center of the conflict even as they were
removed from the battlefield. From courageous resistance and
ingenious methods of organization and communication to failed
escapes and questionable conduct---"warts and all"---Honor Bound
examines in depth the longest and perhaps most remarkable
prisoner-of-war captivity in U.S. history. Stuart I. Rochester
holds a Ph.D, in history from the University of Virginia and taught
at Loyola College in Baltimore before joining the Historical Office
of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, where he is presently
Deputy Historian. He is the author of Takeoff at Mid-Century:
Federal Civil Aviation Policy in the Eisenhower Years, 1953-1961
and American Liberal Disillusionment in the Wake of World War I.
Frederick Kiley earned a Ph.D. in English from the University of
Denver. A retired Air Force colonel, he was a professor of English
at the Air Force Academy prior to serving in Vietnam as an adviser
to the Vietnam Air Force. He is a leading authority on prisoners of
war and the author of Satire from Aesop to Buchwald and A Catch-22
Casebook. From 1984 to 1997 he was Director of the National Defense
University Press and headed the NDU Research Fellows Program.
General
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