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Courage on the Mountain by George Reischling

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Author's Synopsis

Projecting skyward ominously 3200 feet above the surrounding flat jungle terrain towered a solitary goliath of a mountain shrouded with an ancient mystical legend and now an enemy stronghold. Nui Ba Dien or the “Black Virgin Mountain” served as a major staging area for the last finger of the infamous Ho Chi Minh trail as it crossed the Cambodian border just a few miles to the West. Honeycombed with hundreds of caves and fortified with elite NVA and Viet Cong soldiers, she stood as a “Thorn in the Side” of American military control of the region. The 25th Infantry Division held a communication site on her highest peak and also the land encircling her base, but her slopes were voraciously defended by large numbers of elite enemy soldiers. Anytime any American unit undertook to engage her slopes, a hellacious battle was guaranteed with the “Angel of Death” always hovering near!

These memoirs illuminate more than just the courage of battle but also the courage and inner strength that the soldiers of Vietnam had to shoulder upon their return home. Courage and dignity qualify all Vietnam Veterans such that the country that at one time turned their back on them now holds them in high esteem. This is my story, start to finish and it was written to enlighten the reader to a greater understanding of the American men and women and their struggles for survival in America’s most unpopular war!

Format(s) for review: Kindle Only

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 422

Walking on the Sea of Clouds by Gray Rinehart

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Author's Synopsis

Before permanent lunar encampments such as Clarke’s Clavius Base (in 2001: A Space Odyssey) or Heinlein’s Luna City (in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress) could be built, there would have to be the first settlers—the first people to set up shop and try to eke out an existence on the Moon. Walking on the Sea of Clouds is the story of such lunar pioneers: two couples, Stormie and Frank Pastorelli and Van and Barbara Richards, determined to survive and succeed in this near-future technological drama about the risks people will take, the emergencies they’ll face, and the sacrifices they’ll make as members of the first commercial lunar colony. In the end, one will decide to leave, one will decide to stay, one will put off deciding … and one will decide to die so another can live.

Genre(s): Fiction, Fantasy/Sci Fi/Horror

Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, Audiobook

ISBN/ASIN: 978-0-9982092-6-5, 978-0-9982092-7-2, 978-0-9982092-8-9, B07P682ZJW

Nightmares in Green by Dale Kelley

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Author's Synopsis

The darkest dreams meet the light of day.

It’s 1968. Sean Hurley is a hot-headed platoon leader deep in the jungles of Vietnam. This immersive novel brings you betrayals, friends killed in action, and an unexpected spy to keep you guessing rings up to the end.

Genre(s): Fiction, Historical Fiction, Mystery/Thriller

Format(s): Soft cover, ePub/iBook

ISBN/ASIN: 9798334347021

Boot: A Sorta Novel of Vietnam by Charles Templeton

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Author's Synopsis

The true test for surviving war lies in the mind, not on the battlefield. Inspired by the author’s own experiences of US military operations during the Vietnam War. Boot is a debut literary novel that became an Amazon Best Seller on July 21, 2020 and was an Award Winning Finalist in the Best New Fiction category of the 2020 International Book Awards. Boot charts the journey of Marine George Orwell Hill, known affectionately as G. O. by his brothers-in-arms, as he comes to grips with the psychological impacts of war in the jungles and rice paddies of Southeast Asia. Faced with military life ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous, G. O. must navigate the absurdity of warfare and suppress his humanity to survive psychologically. The war challenges his presuppositions—about the world, about life, about himself—as soon as he lands in Vietnam. And his pondering deep questions about humanity becomes a fruitless task in a situation forcing him to accept life for what it is in every gory, absurd detail. Boot is a credible contribution to new literary fiction about the Vietnam War, combining satire and psychology in historical fiction.

Genre(s): Fiction, Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction, Creative Nonfiction, History, Memoir

Format(s): Hard cover, Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook, Audiobook

The Scarlet Oak by Jerry Aylward

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Author's Synopsis

Murder, Spies, and Spirits will take you on a historic time travel journey back to the American Revolution to General Washington's Culper Spy ring to reveal Washington's first female spy, code-named # 355, who has successfully prevented the brutal British Colonel John G. Simcoe from collaborating with Benedict Arnold to turn West Point over to the British.

Genre(s):

Fiction, Historical Fiction, Mystery/Thriller

Format(s):

Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook, Audiobook

Crow Wisdom: A Seasonal Journey by Jasmine Tritten & Wanda Jerome

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Author's Synopsis

Crows have symbolic meanings in many cultures. Incredibly smart, these birds carve a unique place between the natural and spiritual worlds. They fly into our lives and communicate important insights as harbingers of change to come. In homage to the family of corvids – especially crows – we compiled this collection of uplifting poetry, photography and artwork to shed light on their unique contributions to our human experience here on earth. We hope you enjoy this book and crows find their way to you when you need them.

Genre(s): Religious/Spiritual, Poetry Book, Picture Book

Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

WWII Letters and Records of Ellsworth A. Westgate by Frank Westgate

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Author's Synopsis

WWII Letters that where written and sent home to Ellsworth Grandparents Some our more readable that others. I took Dads Letters page by page in order and tried to type out in an alternate letter as close as possible to the original. Both will be attached in order.

Genre(s): Memoir

Format(s): Soft cover


Unaccounted by Michael McDonald-Low

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Author's Synopsis

The Vietnam War was an ugly, brutal conflict that ended lives and tortured its survivors. Nobody knows that better than the infantry grunts who served in northern I Corp - Que Son Valley area of operations. More U.S. Army infantrymen and Marines died there than at any other location in Vietnam. More medals for heroism were awarded in this region than in any other single combat location. On 5 May 1968, the downing of two helicopters in the Que Son Valley marked the beginning of the North Vietnamese Army’s second Tet offensive and their goal of destroying all U.S. forces. At 1728 hours, Delta Company, 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry conducted a combat air assault to join Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry at the helicopters fatally downed location. During the next six days, their experiences would set the stage for a three-month-long battle that lasted only hours for some. In the end, there would be more than 2,300 dead and wounded, and one American soldier missing in action. It will take over 44 years to find his location. UNACCOUNTED is his story.

Genre(s): Nonfiction

Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

ISBN/ASIN:B092XFBQNM, B092WTK254

These Fought in Any Case: A Collection of Poems and Short Stories by Veterans

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Author's Synopsis

The Military Writers Society of America and The Cuddy Family Foundation for Veterans are honored to present a collection of original poems and short stories from veterans of the armed forces. Hundreds of submissions were received for a contest to send one veteran to the MWSA's Annual Convention set for August 2022 in New Orleans and the finalists are featured in this book. It is our pleasure to publish the creative efforts of the following veterans: Scott Mulvaney (Marine Corps), Kari Sobisky (Marine Corps), Melanie Costa (Marine Corps & Army), Jim Greenwald (Navy), Eric Leja (Marine Corps), Philip Julian (CO Army National Guard), Reed Bonadonna (Marine Corps), Marc Levy (Army), Theresa Ann Boquist (Navy), Mark Voelker (Marine Corps), Michael Lund (Navy), John Cathcart (Air Force), Tanya R. Whitney (Army), Michael Mullane (Navy), Eric Wasileski (Army & Navy), Thomas Mangan (Air Force), Donald Purdy (Navy), Jim Tritten (Navy), Richard K. Cartwright (Air Force), Jon M. Nelson (Army), Jessi Atherton (Army National Guard), George J. Bryjak (Marine Corps), Steven Wade Veatch (Navy), J. Scott Price (VA Army National Guard), Tim Weaver (Air Force), Ken Harbert (Navy & Coast Guard), Everett Cox (Army), R.G. Roberts (Navy), Briana M. Carr (Army), Jennifer K. Yancey (Army), Alexis Casiday (Navy), Robert W. Poirier (Navy), and Elvis Aaron Leighton (MN Army National Guard). This anthology was compiled by G.A. Cuddy and edited by April Leavenworth and I.Z. Fallon. The poem "Spring Thaw" by J. Scott Price of Faber (VA) was selected as the top selection.

Proceeds from the sale of this book will be split evenly between The Military Writers Society of America (mwsadispatches.com) and The Cuddy Family Foundation for Veterans (tcfffv.org). Note: the inspiration for the title of this collection stems from Ezra Pound's "Hugh Selwyn Mauberley," his 1920 poetry book that included a stirring elegy dedicated to those who served, and fought in any case, during The Great War.

Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again by Carol Yee

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MWSA Review
Carol Yee’s Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again is a warmly written, informative memoir about how travel made her a citizen of the world. It also has many tips for those who may want to travel internationally, but are a bit timid and don’t really know how to go about it.

In her book, she discusses cultural differences in food, appearance, and customs that show her deep understanding of various parts of the world, while at the same time providing important information to her readers who might be considering travel. She covers practical issues such as “How do I know if the water is safe?” and “What is the attitude toward women and their dress?” in various countries. She also gives good advice on adjusting one’s own behavior to gain better understanding of the local peoples and maximize the travel experience. This is all done in informative and sometimes humorous ways, citing her extensive travel around the world.

I particularly like her humble, humorous style which conveys some fairly serious lessons without ever making herself out to be an expert or talking down to the audience. The book is well-written, has numerous important travel resources, and is easy to understand.

Readers who enjoy travel, who must travel internationally for work, or who think they might wish to travel internationally in their later years will most certainly enjoy this book.

Review by Rob Ballister (June 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Through people-to-people encounters, we expand our sense of mutual understanding and respect.

Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again: How I Became a Citizen of the World highlights how rewarding it is to engage people from around the world. Learning from others who are different from us reveals our common humanity and enhances our ability to solve problems and deal with global crises.

You will be entertained by different travel adventures from around the world and be exposed to interesting cross cultural insights, both cautionary but also delightful.  

World travelers will enjoy “traveling” through Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again, recalling their own experiences, while novice travelers will feel the spark to get out and explore the world.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1636765921, 978-1636761077, 978-1636761084

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 256


Fragments: The Long Coming Home from Vietnam by Bruce Berger

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MWSA Review
This is an incredible read.

Though short in page/word count, Bruce Berger’s Fragments reads like an opus of the Vietnam War, outlining what he refers to in the audio version as “the long afterness” of the war. It has the emotional impact of Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried or Karl Marlantes’s Matterhorn, and we’re fortunate to have Fragments join the canon of literature that emerged from the veterans of that long war.
This is not a typical “Roses are red, violets are blue…” book of poetry. Berger’s writing style is soulful and improvisational, which lends a sense of honesty and earnestness to his characters and scenes. The result is 34 individual stories/poems that will pull at a reader’s psyche and leave a lasting vision of what it was like to serve and survive in Vietnam.

Berger proves to be a patriot, poet, and philosopher. There isn’t much chest-thumping bravado in his poems. Instead, he delves into the fear, hope, confusion, desperation, and loneliness of this war. Berger also pays homage to the people of Vietnam, with several stories driving home the perspective of the Vietnamese people who were fighting and living through the war as well, whether it is the double-entendre story of “Girl Selling Her Fruit” or the soul crushing “Widows’ Village.” In this regard, Berger humanizes the Vietnamese people, similar to how Ken Burns did in his documentary The Vietnam War.

There are too many brilliant passages to describe, but here are a few that had a powerful, stinging impact for me:
“…the bloody mathematics of such action…”
“Why the hell were we where the hell we were?”
“…ceremonial ribbons, silver affirmations and golden glorifications…”
“…the detritus of my delirium…”
“His heart leaks into the grave”

Fragments is about Berger’s time in Vietnam, and this book will take readers “there”—both to the literal jungles and the psychological jungles in the depths of the minds of those who walked the ground in country. And even though this is a book about the Vietnam experience, Berger’s words will resonate with anybody who has served—whenever and wherever—particularly in Afghanistan, that has so many parallels to Vietnam.

An added bonus to this fantastic book are the works of art provided by the Providence Art Club in Rhode Island. The art complements many of the stories and makes this a wonderful work of history, poetry, philosophy, and art. I originally had this on a Kindle but ordered a print version and am grateful to have it in my library.

Review by Frank Biggio (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Bruce Berger, the author, finally came home 50 years after the Vietnam war when his memories crystallized into the 34 poems in this chapbook. He served in Vietnam in 1970 with the Casualty Branch of the 101st Airborne Division. As “next-of-kin” editor, he wrote hundreds of sympathy letters to grieving families back home, and sometimes helped gather fallen brothers on battle grounds to begin their long journeys home. He was immersed in the words, images, weight, and limitless reach of death. 

Through this lens, his poems evoke an overwhelming sense of loss on many fronts: the brave soldiers who gave their lives; a village of South Vietnamese widows; the thousands of bui doi, innocent but reviled half-breed (Amerasian) children; the empty afterness of battle grounds and burials; the long, deadly reach of Agent Orange and PTSD into veterans’ lives still today; and the thunderous silence of missing parades back home. Writing these poems brought him home. 

The book is divided into six sections: Taps, Dreaming of Home, Life on the Perimeter, Pictures and Prayers, PTSD, and Seasons. The 34 moving poems are enriched by 25 powerful illustrations created by 13 members of the Providence Art Club of Rhode Island.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-0-9855048-1-6,978-0-9855048-2-3,978-0-9855048-3-0

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, Audiobook

Review Genre: Poetry—Poetry Book

Number of Pages: 92


Impaired by Michael Lepore

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MWSA Review
Impaired: The Continuing Crisis for Vietnam Veterans by Michael Lepore is a heartfelt and moving tribute to those who served during that war. Lepore’s latest installment of poetry books focusing on Vietnam includes an additional theme: the recognition of mortality that comes with old age.

Most combat veterans are forced to come to grips with their mortality as young men and women. After coming face to face with death repeatedly during that war, Vietnam veterans are now dealing with another, even more intractable foe: the Old Man’s Grim Reaper. As Lepore deftly points out in several of his poems, these vets are getting old and facing the end of their lives—often without much support, and frequently while also fighting the ghosts of that now long-past, and still unpopular conflict.

Review by John Cathcart (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Poems in this collection provide glimpses into the hearts and minds of Vietnam War combat veterans, men who were once vital and strong facing the reality of age and approaching death. Some of the veterans in these poems are at war with themselves, some return to the country where their youth was lost and some fear for the future. As in real life, there are seldom happy endings to these stories. They are not anti-war poems or pro-war poems; they just tell it the way it was and the way it is.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-943826-77-3

Book Format(s): Soft cover

Review Genre: Poetry—Poetry Book

Number of Pages: 50


Young Hickory by Steven Underwood

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MWSA Review
Young Hickory: A WWII Novel by Steven F. Underwood follows the deployment of James Farrell from 1944 to 1945 through attachments to different platoons in the 120th Regiment of the 30th Division in Europe. The book is populated by many and varied characters, some of them fictional and some of them based in reality. The author has undertaken an enormous amount of research to frame a fictitious individual’s experience of World War II from the D-Day Normandy invasion through the Battle of the Bulge and beyond. Many footnotes are included in this work of fiction to differentiate which characters are real people.

Tall and lanky, Jim is tapped to become a runner, miraculously finding his way through enemy lines to deliver information from the front lines—where his company is surrounded on Mortain’s Hill 314—to headquarters and back again. From there we follow him through France, Belgium, and Germany to Magdeburg, short of Berlin. He is wounded several times and finds love in Liege, Belgium, before meeting —while recuperating from significant wounds in a hospital in Cologne—the woman he will eventually marry.

Readers will want to print out the list of characters in the beginning of the book, so as to keep them all straight. A map is also a helpful aid in understanding what was happening and where it was happening.

Review by Betsy Beard (May 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
The 75th anniversary of the ending of World War II inspired me to write a novel centered on the exploits of a remarkable National Guard division, the 30th, nicknamed ‘Old Hickory.’

Jim Farrell joins the 30th Infantry Division in July, 1944. Injured in a D-Day practice exercise with the 29th Division, he is a replacement in the Old Hickory Division after an accidental bombing attack severely damages the 120th Regiment. It takes time for Jim to assimilate into his new unit, but his observational and tracking skills soon earn him praise. His efforts help Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 120th survive the battle of Mortain.

Wounded in action, Jim goes to Liege for medical attention. There, he meets a young Belgian woman named Lille. He falls madly in love with her. She returns his affection. The tall, handsome Virginian reminds her of Gary Cooper.

He rejoins the 120th where his abilities lead to his addition to the Intelligence and Reconnaissance Platoon of the regiment. He becomes friends with Dave Harris, a native of Greensboro who has visited Jim’s hometown of Alta Vista.

Jim, Dave, and his entire squad distinguish themselves at the battle of Aachen and Jim gains a promotion. He is given a pass to Paris, but he goes to Liege instead. He and Lille consummate their love on a hill overlooking the Meuse River. Jim promises to return. However, his next visit is delayed by the Battle of the Bulge. Once again, Jim and his platoon gain accolades for rescuing survivors of the Malmedy massacre. He is promoted to sergeant and given command of the platoon when his commanding officer is severely wounded.

The Battle of the Bulge has made it difficult for the division to receive mail. As the battle wanes, Jim’s unit receive their delayed mail. He gets five letters from Lille, each promising her love to him. She writes that he has inspired her to go to Antwerp to study nursing. As Jim finishes that letter, another member of the squad reads out loud that an army newspaper reports a movie theater in Antwerp was hit by a V-2 rocket. The theater was playing a Gary Cooper film. Fearfully, Jim opens a letter from a friend of Lille’s. It informs him she was killed by the rocket.

Immediately after receiving the letter, the platoon is sent on a mission to rescue a Belgian family. They arrive at the family’s house in Faymonville, Belgium. It is occupied by a German soldier and the dead bodies of the entire family. Enraged, Jim reacts with murderous intent. His friend, Dave Harris, tries to stop him. Failing that, Dave works to salvage Jim’s psyche as the platoon moves on to the last battles of the war, the crossing of the Roer and Rhine rivers and battles in Germany. Dave constantly reminds Jim of his need to forgive the Germans and himself. Harris is wounded at the battle of Magdeburg. Jim becomes estranged from his unit. It is in the aftermath of a visit to Magdeburg Cathedral that Jim faces his final crisis.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-55571-982-1,

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction

Number of Pages: 302