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Reviews
“…sheds more light on what daily life was like
for a soldier in that war than Apocalypse Now, Platoon, or any of the
countless films made about it... few if any writers have thought more
deeply about what combat does to a young man, making universal his
experience in that conflict. He uses novelistic devices skillfully to
make his book a compelling read.”—
Sarah Greene, Gilmer Mirror
About the Book
David Bedard enlisted in the United States Army shortly after
graduating from college and landed five months later in February
1969 in Quan Loi, Vietnam.
In
the remote wilderness of Ouachita National Forest, he dug up the
memories, some too terrible to bear. Stories of the way of life and
living conditions of American soldiers in Vietnam, of the French and
Vietnamese who lived in the vicinity of Quan Loi, of the horrors of
war, and of the return home to Texas where David struggled with the
realization that the war had changed him, and that he would never be
the same person he was before going to Vietnam.
The
book delves into the very heart of a young man’s emotions and trials,
of Vietnam duty and readjustment to the American way of life.
Exploring the frustrations of patriotism for one man who chose
to serve his country during the Vietnam War, it reveals the soul of
one American soldier.
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