Synopses & Reviews
Colonel David H. Hackworth, one of America's most decorated soldiers, lays bare his most daring and legendary tour of duty.
1966
With a full year of Vietnam combat and five months of in-country intense after-action analysis under his pistol belt, Hackworth pens the classic tactical handbook the Vietnam Primer with military historian Samuel Marshall. In a radical shift from the World War II-era tactics then employed in Vietnam, Hackworth stresses the necessity of using disciplined, small units of well-trained men to best fight the hit-and-run warfare of the elusive Viet Cong. "Out G'ing the G," he called his tactics.
1969
Hackworth's expertise lands him back in Vietnam. The Army's message is clear-put up, or shut up. Given the "hopeless," morale-drained 4/39th-an infantry battalion of poorly led draftees with one of the Army's worst casualty rates-Hackworth leads from up front and finds the best in every one of his grunts. Together, they take a page from the VC, write their own book, and become the meanest in the Mekong Delta-the Hardcore Recondos.
2002
With the U.S. again facing elusive insurgent foes-and the hit-and-run tactics of the international terror networks we're presently up against-the 4/39th Hardcore Battalion's successes provide hard-won lessons-learned that are more applicable now than ever.
A tour de force of frontline combat action, Steel My Soldiers' Hearts takes readers alongside sniper missions, into grunt ambush actions, above fields of fire with hard-hitting helicopter strikes, and inside the quagmire of command politics. Hackworth graduates the Mekong Delta brotherhood into the pantheon of our nation's most heroic warriors.
Review
"[Hackworth is] the best military leader this country has had since Patton." The Philadelphia Inquirer
Review
"Tougher than a one-dollar steak and madder than John Wayne at a peace rally, Maxim contributor Hackworth tears the U.S. armed forces a new one with this memoir of how he transformed the F Troop of Vietnam into a crack fighting force. He makes clear it wasnt the men in the field who lost that war, but their leaders, who couldnt decide if they were waging a peacekeeping mission or a police action. Equal parts enlightening and frightening, Steels look into the booby-trapped world of Apocalypse Nowstyle male bonding may not drive you to be all you can be. In fact, it might make you want to take cover till the next big ones over." Maxim
Review
"An exceptional warrior...a soldier's soldier." The Washington Post Book World
Review
"Honest, extremely intelligent and perhaps the best military leader this country has had since Patton." The Philadelphia Inquirer
Review
"Hackworth weighs in with a long, blow-by-blow account of his second tour in Vietnam, as a 9th Infantry Division battalion commander....The portrait that emerges is of a battalion commander with integrity, guts, leadership ability and an abiding concern for the welfare of his men as well as, it must be acknowledged, a modest desire to self-promote." Publishers Weekly
Review
"[A] Front-line legend." W.E.B. Griffin
Review
"A man who's braved the heat of battle time and time again." Clive Cussler
Synopsis
Steel My Soldiers' Hearts is narrative nonfiction at its best a tour de force of frontline combat action beginning the moment Hackworth's Huey lands in the Delta in January 1969 and ending shortly after he collects his eighth Purple Heart. 16-page photo insert.
About the Author
David H. Hackworth (Col., U.S. Army, Ret.) enlisted in the U.S. Army as a private at fifteen. From the end of World War II through the Korean War and almost five years of combat duty in Vietnam, he's spent a quarter century in our nation's defense. After hanging up his soldier suit, as a war correspondent and defense editor for
Newsweek magazine and a radio and television commentator, he's reported on war-fighting, terrorism, and other related topics in the Persian Gulf, South America, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Afghanistan and other hot spots. His King Features nationally syndicated column,
Defending America, appears weekly in newspapers across America. He is the author of the bestsellers
About Face, Hazardous Duty and
Price of Honor. Hackworth is currently under consideration for the Medal of Honor for "above and beyond" combat heroism detailed in this book.
Eilhys England, founder and former head of a top-50 marketing and PR firm, produces feature films and writes with her partner and husband David Hackworth. They live in Connecticut and Australia.