Synopses & Reviews
Nearly forty years after the official end of the Vietnam War, allows us to witness the war firsthand through the eyes of the men and women who served in Vietnam. In this collection of more than 200 letters, they share their first impressions of the rigors of life in the bush, their longing for home and family, their emotions over the conduct of the war, and their ache at the loss of a friend in battle. Poignant in their rare honesty, the letters from Vietnam are "riveting,... extraordinary by [their] very ordinariness... for the most part, neither deep nor philosophical, only very, very human" (). Revealing the complex emotions and daily realities of fighting in the war, these close accounts offer a powerful, uniquely personal portrait of the many faces of Vietnam's veterans.
Review
"Not a history book, not a war novel.... is a book of truth." Boston Globe
Review
" is more than correspondence from homesick GIs. It is a collective letter to the nation and its government, a plea that asks: Why did you do this to your children? To America? For the sake of our country, don't let this happen again." San Francisco Chronicle
Review
" is painful, but it must be difficult to be realistic and entertaining about war.... Reading it, I felt I was listening to the voices of the men and women who lived and fought in Vietnam." Baltimore Sun
Review
" tells of an ache as ancient as time--adolescents off to war with high expectations, who soon change greatly. Ambiguities abound--from pain, disillusionment and sorrow for dead comrades to a hard-earned measure of individual strength and survival." Washington Post Book World
Review
"Here is the sad and beautiful countermelody of truth, audible at last, now that we have trashed the drums and cymbals of yet another senseless war." Kurt Vonnegut
Review
"No full understanding of the most disastrous foreign war in American history can be complete without reading these letters from the GIs to their loved ones back home." Peter Arnett, Pulitzer Prize-winning Vietnam correspondent
Synopsis
"An overwhelmingly eloquent book of the purest and most simple writing on Vietnam."--David Halberstam
About the Author
Bernard Edelman served as a broadcast specialist/correspondent in Vietnam. He is the author of Centenarians: The Story of the 20th Century by the Americans Who Lived It