Survivors: Vietnam P.O.W.s Tell Their Stories
By (Author) Zalin Grant
Hachette Books
Da Capo Press Inc
22nd March 1994
United States
General
Non Fiction
Biography: historical, political and military
Asian history
959.70430922
Paperback
360
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
This book is the moving story of nine American soldiers and pilots who were captured and held prisoner for five years. It could only be told in their own words; so author Zalin Grant interviewed each of the men and wove their accounts together to form a single, compelling narrative of war and survival. They describe the details of their daily existence in a Vietcong jungle prison as the war ebbed and flowed around them: the rats, the terror of American bombing raids, the sickness, starvation, and torture. Through the juxtaposition of their individual stories we see the subtle, destructive tensions that operate on a group of men in such desperate circumstances. Marched up the Ho Chi Minh trail to Hanoi, the prisoners physical ordeal gave way to an agonizing moral dilemma. Should they join the Peace Committee, a group of POWs protesting the war Or should they resist their captors by all possible means as ordered by the secret American commander of the Hanoi prison After years in the jungle on the edge of survival, each man had to answer the questions: Who am I What do I believe These men form a cross section of the army we sent to Vietnam. Their words illuminate not only their individual background and experience, but also the meaning of this war for all of us.
Zalin Grant served as an officer in Army Intelligence in Vietnam and later returned as a correspondent for Time and for The New Republic. He is the author of Facing the Phoenix: The CIA and the Political Defeat of the United States in Vietnam.