DMZ Diary: A Combat Marine's Vietnam Memoir
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- US$8.99
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- US$8.99
출판사 설명
"It came with no warning pop. Compressed into a fraction of a second was the shrill, expanding screech of the approaching round and the explosion that rocked the hilltop. The players, sitting Indian-style at a game of back-alley bridge, were torn to pieces. It happened in the blink of an eye. August 27, 1968."
The Vietnam War's hottest year was 1968, and the demilitarized zone (DMZ) was its hottest spot. Battalions on each side stalked the DMZ's mean hills seeking contact. In this memoir the author tells of the war "up north" on the border between North and South Vietnam. There the combat was large-scale and marked by conventional battles fought by disciplined troops on both sides, each supported by heavy artillery and tanks.
For each side there was a trump card: the North Vietnamese could withdraw to sanctuary across the DMZ; the Marines possessed air power. The author, a forward air controller with a Marine grunt company, fought alongside the infantrymen, directing close air support, talking helicopters into "hot" landings to evacuate wounded and communicating with aerial observers circling in slow spotter planes for a birds-eye view of the enemy.
사용자 리뷰
Interesting Read
Not the most action, if thats what you like. But, a good quick read and very interesting that the author/main character was a radioman. The authors are usually LRRP’s or of that sort. But he lost a lot of friends so there was heavy fighting in the DMZ. There’s some safety because calling in air support gave him freedom to stay with CP.
Compelling Read
The first hand experiences and down-to-earth writing make for a compelling and easy read.
Exciting and accurate
I say "accurate" because my father was with G 2/3 '67-68 and agrees. I did not serve, but have read so many books about Vietnam that I've lost count.
Thank you for your service Mr Kelly. This book had me glued to the pages at any and every opportunity I had available to read. I don't think there are many books written about Vietnam from the "RTO" perspective and this one educated me on how you operated, as well as how crucial the comm guys were (just assumed it was an LT and "you guys" were just humping the PRC 25) to getting air & artillery support and of course medevacs.
Great book, "Air"!