Book Reviews |
DispatchesMichael HerrAlfred A. Knopf, 1977 - ISBN 0-330-49199-7 |
Publisher's Summary Review From a factual point of view, Herr offers a viewpoint about as far as from the dry, positive analyses from the Center of Military History as it's possible to get. Herr was there on the ground and saw the human side of the war, from savagery to laziness. If you want your games to have the right feel, not just in terms of weapon ranges but in terms of emotional choices then you need to absorb this one. |
NamMark BakerAbacus, 1982 - ISBN 0-349-10239-2 |
Publisher's Summary Even now something is missing from the history of Vietnam. Behind the burning sense of horror and betrayal the personal stories remain untold. No one has bothered to talk to the men and women who went to Vietnam and fought the war. What happened to the boys and girls straight out of school who were plunged from the basketball park into the napalm jungle? Who were they fighting for? How did conscripts and volunteers live through the war and how can they now live with the scars? Mark Baker recorded conversations with dozens of Vietnam veterans. Nam is a unique and harrowing collection of those interviews, as raw and shocking as an open wound. This is the story of the human cost of a war that had no survivors, only veterans." Review Nam is a collection of one and two page sections of interviews with veterans, grouped under headings such as 'Baptism of Fire' and 'Homecoming'. There is no particular sequence or continuity and each section is completely unattributed, (although you can often discover the role of the interviewee from the content). Personally I found it too disjointed - the pile of film on the cutting room bench waiting to be made up into something cohesive. In addition, many of the sections contain fairly contraversial content, and the lack of any attributied sources somewhat undermined its credibility. Nevertheless each section is well edited and contains some compelling snippets. |
We Were Soldiers Once...And YoungLt. Gen Harold G. Moore & Joseph L. GallowayHarper Collins, 1992 - ISBN 0-06-097576-8 |
Publisher's Summary Review As well as being a factual account of the battle the book is also a gripping story. From the relentless stream of facts comes a detailed picture of the developing situation from both a command and an individual level. Moore shares the tactical dilemmas and the reasoning behind his decisions in a way which makes you appreciate the skill required to command in battle. |
Red Thunder, Tropic Lightning
Eric M. Bergerund |
Publisher's Summary a division that knew intimately every cruel facet of the war. They bore the brunt of the Tet Offensive. They chased deadly shadows through the Viet Cong's infamous tunnel network. And they suffered the ordeal of jungle warfare: By 1971 their losses were among the highest in the army, with 5,000 men killed and many times that number wounded. In this book the men of the 25th Division describe in their own words the frustration and torment that faced all American combat soldiers in Vietnam. Their story illustratews why the task given the U.S. Army proved so formidable and ultimately futile. It shows why brave and skillful fighting men could win battle after battle, but still not obtain a final victory. For anyone who remembers the Vietnam War, or wishes to understand it, this is an enlightening, heartbreaking history. " Review This is an excellent book which describes all aspects of the division's action. It contains an overall strategic overview, individual accounts of battles and details of equipment and tactics. |
The History of the Vietnam WarCharles T. Kamps Jr1988 - ISBN 0-600-55783-9 |
Publisher's Summary The History of the Vietnam War documents U.S. involvement in South East Asia from the days of the first advisors to the lift-off of the last chopper from Saigon. It was an unusual war. Vietnam saw the first large-scale of the helicopter in combat. Battlelines were not clear; jungle warfare presented constant changes. When the U.S. soldier was presented with conventional opposition, as in the Ia Drang valley, at Khe Sanh, or in the streets of Hue, he usually won. Most of the time there was no way of knowing who the enemy was, and so the endless patrolling through mud or dust was vital. At sea, there was no real enemy, but the Navy was totally involved in the war. From the first clashes in the Gulf of Tonkin the carriers sent their aircraft striking deep into North Vietnam. Along the coasts, warships poured fire into Viet Cong positions in support of troops on the ground. In the murky waters of the Mekong Delta smaller river craft fought a vicious struggle to the end. It was in the air that U.S. power was most obvious. Giant Boeing B-52s pulverized the Ho Chi Minh trail and Hanoi, as did tactical aircraft such as the F-105 Thunderchief. F-4 Phantoms tangled with MiGs over the North and unloaded huge amounts of ordnance over the South. Ageing propeller-driven fighter-bombers proved lethal to the Vietcong, and the helicopter was everywhere. Vietnam was a war unlike any other in U.S. History. Unpopular at home and abroad, facing an elusive and dedicated enemy, the U.S. forces could not win a decisive victory. The U.S. forces fought a difficult war that will be studied and debated for years to come. " Review |
The US Army in VietnamLeroy ThompsonDavid & Charles, 1990 - ISBN 0-71-539219-0 |
Publisher's Summary Review This is great material for the Vietnam wargamer, but I think it is out of print and may be difficult to find. I picked this copy up for only £5 from an army surplus shop on Abbeydale Road, Sheffield, UK, which had a stock of them. |
Sky SoldiersF. Clifton Berry JrBantam Books, 1987 - ISBN 0-553-34320-3 |
Publisher's
Summary Review Sky Soldiers is a good general wargaming resource, as it covers all aspects of this unit in reasonable detail, rather than concentrating on one specific topic such as uniforms. Based around a chronology of the brigade's deployment in Vietnam from 1965 to 1970, it also contains accounts of specific engagements including diagrams, and some discussion of equipment and tactics. For a fairly small book there is a surprising amount of information packed into it, and there is plenty of specific numerical detail to help construct realistic scenarios. The author was operations officer for the 196 Light Infantry Brigade, so presumably he knows what he is talking about, although there is a noticeable lack of criticism of any aspect of their operations. |
Telltale Hearts - The Origins and Impact of the Vietnam AntiWar MovementAdam Garfinkle |
Review Garfinkle argues that the public opinion was led predominantly by the administration itself. When support began to degrade in 1968, it was not the Tet itself which triggered the slide. A month later in February a Gallup poll, which asked whether people considered themselves hawks or doves, resulted in 61% rating themselves as hawks and only 23% as doves. It was a dominant view that as a considerable cost in lives and dollars had already been incurred, the only way was forward. However after LBJs speech in March 1968 when he announced that they would attempt negotiations to end the war and halt the bombing, public support plummeted. The government had shown that it did not believe itself that the war could be won, and that the best outcome that could be hoped for was that the US could disentangle itself with as little further pain as possible. In spite of this in 1970 the majority of the public still opposed a unilateral withdrawal from Vietnam, a stance more hawkish than the government. He further believes that the war was winnable, and not through giving the military a free hand, as is now commonly argued. Much of US strategy ignored the principal objective - that of a non-Communist, democratic government in South Vietnam. The very scale of the US involvement undermined and corrupted the Saigon government and destroyed any nationalist credentials which it was entitled to claim. Furthermore military objectives are of little value if the ultimate victory which is sought is primarily a political one. If every military asset of the VC had been destroyed, but in the process the populace had been alienated and made hostile to the US and pro-American Vietnamese politicians, then the US would have failed. Success should have been counted in terms of friendly populace, not dead Communists. Although this book has few military facts that would be useful to wargamers, its unusual approach to the politics underpinning the US administration's strategic decisions makes fascinating reading. It could also provide useful themes and political information for a Matrix style game or a map based campaign where the players control the whole of US involvement in RVN and juggle military and political objectives. |
Armies of the Vietnam War 1962-75Philip Katcher & Mike ChappellOsprey Publishing, 1980 - ISBN 0-85045-360-7 |
Review It also contains black and white photos illustrating a wide range of troop types and equipment and diagrams of rank markings. |
Armies of the Vietnam War 2Lee E Russell Katcher & Mike ChappellOsprey Publishing, 1983 - ISBN 0-85045-514-6 |
Review This one contains more information on the Communist soldiers than the previous volume, and also contains some pictures of Special Forces. |
If I Die in a Combat ZoneTim O'Brien |
Review There isn't a great deal of military information, except for some evocative snippets of combat and patrolling from the infantryman's perspective. He recounts actually seeing some armed enemy only once in the entire year, and even then they are too far away to engage. The rest of the time his company plods through booby traps and faked ambushes. O'Brien paints his characters in a brief and elegant way and their reaction to the situations they find themselves in is highly compelling and realistic. Golden moments include his captain failing to report an enemy ambush because he can't be bothered to 'mess around with gunships', the idiot Texan Captain who comes within a hair's breadth of being fragged and the frenzied firing at nothing at the beginning. By turns funny and moving, this is a must-read for anyone at all, let alone those with a particular interest in Vietnam. |
Going after CacciatoTim O'BrienJonathan Cape, 1978 - ISBN 0-00-654307-3 |
Publisher's
Summary Review This seemed to be a novel set in Vietnam rather than a novel about Vietnam, and didn't convey its specific atmosphere with the vivid quality of 'If I die in a Combat Zone'. The characters are interesting and well characterised, their realism contrasting with the surrealism of the journey, however the ending is somewhat unsatisfying. The book is of limited use to the wargamer, as there is not much of the actual war in it.
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The Things They CarriedTim O'BrienCollins, 1990 - ISBN 0-00-654394-4 |
Publisher's
Summary Review Arbitrary devastation and daily mundanity sit cheek-by-jowl in a thought-provoking portrait of this war. O'Brien portrays the humanity of the soldiers more clearly with a delicately embellished list of the items they carry than most writers achieve with their almost obligatory mention of men's age, hometown and marital status. As with his other novels, there isn't a lot of military detail (most interesting is probably his mention of the platoon as fielding a mere 17 men), but it has enough merit to make it worth reading nonetheless. |
The 13th ValleyJohn M. Del VecchioSphere Books, 1982 - ISBN 0-7221-8837-4 |
Publisher's
Summary It is 1970. The tide of war has turned. The antiwar movement back home wants peace. Troop withdrawals have begun. But in the whispering, deadly jungles of Vietnam 101st Air Division have a mission. They can still run and shoot and hide and love and hate and scream. They can still fight and live and die in THE 13th VALLEY." Review A battalion of the 101st Airborne is sent into an isolated river valley not far south of the DMZ to locate and destroy an NVA regimental HQ in an isolated river valley. This fictionalised account, based on the composite of a number of real engagements, centres on the Alpha Company and in particular a new recruit and his short-timer sergeant. The account contains a considerable amount of company level military detail, which is ideal for fleshing out the scenarios used for most wargames. It's written competently but the characters are a little bit wooden, and a little bit cliched. There is the innocent newbie, the cynical veteran, the cowardly shirker, the black with the 'this is a white man's war' chip on his shoulder etc.etc. The book also contains a considerable amount of philosophical discussion on the nature of the War, war in general and the rights of government, mostly in the guise of a book that the Lieutenant commanding the company is working on. Caught between a personal level novel and a factual account of a battle, it doesn't work as well as it might as either. The cover proclaims it to be 'The finest novel to come out of the Vietnam War'. Unfortunately it isn't. |
More Vietnam book reviews can be found at the GRUNT site.
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