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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2007 Military Magazine~' ... .k~x ~ r kS ~ ; ~ .~ %. in history, to receive the award. Throughout the narrative the author has "flashbacks" to other events in his life, the obstacles he had to overcome throughout his life, and his indomitable spirit. His faith in God and his love for the Marine Corps permeates his narrative. SgtMaj Jack W. Jaunal, USMC (Ret), Federal Way, WA aa. aa. ai ra. a.. NAMES I CAN'T REMEMBER -AN ASSASSIN CONFESSES, by Douglas R. Bergman (War- rior Group, 2005; 292 pp., $24.95 -ISBN 0975917714). This book is a graphic tale of the tour of an infantry lieutenant and his Viet-Nam experience. Written in an eclectic mix of prose and poetry reminiscent of Ernest Hemingway, and occasionally in rambling verse difficult to follow, Bergman recounts his youth and his personal struggles with alcohol and his enlistment in the Army as an escape from his middle class family life. I recall what it was like coming of age during the Viet-Nam War. I graduated from high school in 1967 and I was within a month of the same age as Bergman. It was sometimes difficult for boys to have to take on such awesome respon- sibilities at such a young age, and Bergman describes the emotional hardship it presented to him. From his enlistment through basic training, OCS, airborne qualification and assignment to Viet-Nam, his sometimes-gratuitous use of harsh language to describe his experiences, including his first sexual encounter, may be offensive to some readers. If not for the pho- tocopy of his DD-214 and excerpts from his 201 file, this book could be taken for a novel rather than a personal account. However, writ- ing about his struggle with alcohol during his tour of duty, one can understand his recollection of the events he describes. In 35 years of researching the history of the Viet- Nam War and my own experiences during my service in Viet-Nam, I have never encountered some of the incidents Bergman recounts. The ritual dousing of the new lieu- tenant with the combined urine of his patrol members and the point man's insertion of a twig down the barrel of his M-16 as a sensor for night patrols seems to be vicarious imagery. This was a difficult read for me but is an interesting work. For those who are interested in a broad spectrum of Viet-Nam experiences, this book will be a good addition to their collection. For those interested in trying to understand the deepest recesses of the mind of one who lived the trauma of Viet-Nam, this is also recommended reading. CMS Steven L. Pennington, USAF, (Ret) Edmonds, WA COMBAT REPORTER -DON WHITE- HEAD'S WORLD WAR II DIARY AND MEMOIRS, by John B. Romeiser (Ford- ham University Press, 2006; 236 pp., $26.95 -ISBN 978082322675?). Don Whitehead was with the Associated Press (AP) headquar- ters in New York after being a cor- respondent in Knoxville, Tennessee, from 1937 to 1940. He undertook the considerable risks of frontline reporting during WWII in order to provide a more authentic story for his readers back home. Like his friends and fellow journalists, Ernie Pyle of Scripps Howard, and Jack Belden of Time, he fulfilled his desire to be up front where the fighting men were. For the AP, Whitehead covered almost every important Allied invasion and campaign in the North African-European Theaters of Operations from North Africa to landings in Sicily, Salerno, Anzio and Normandy to the drive into Germany. His dispatches, pub- lished in the collection, "Beachhead Don," edited by John B. Romeiser, are treasures of wartime journal- ism. Romeiser, who teaches at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, edited this volume of Whitehead's writings covering Cairo, Sept.-Nov 1942; Libya, Nov 1942-Feb. 1943; Tunisia Mar.-Apr. 1943, and Sicily, July-Aug. 1943. In the Cairo chap- ters, as Whitehead was accredited with the British, the editor has included both Whitehead's diary and his later war memoirs, writ- ten some six years later. The latter appear in italics, including much of the same combat materials, but from a much different perspective. It is a great loss to war journalism that Whitehead never had time to carry his memoirs further. The final part of this narrative is drawn from Whitehead's unfinished boom typescript, written almost a decade later. The source of some of the Sicily narrative can be found in the dispatches he wrote for the AP while covering the U.S. 1st visit us at www.milmag.com 40 MILITARY, September 2007 ra. a.. aa. a~ ri Infantry Division. Unlike his wire dispatches for the AP, the writing in his diary and war memoirs is - more personal. Whitehead is able to vent his frustrations with the bureaucratic hurdles he often had to clear just to be able to report. Moreover, Whitehead expresses in great clarity the horror of combat, including its attendant destruction of innocent lives and property in graphic terms, in a language that most likely would have never made it past the censors at AP headquar- ters in New York. Whitehead makes poignant comparisons in all the campaigns between British, American, German and Italian soldiers, and between Generals Montgomery, Patton, Bradley, Hodges, Terry Allen, Teddy Roosevelt, Jr. and Clarence Hue- buer. Also, much is written about the civilians: Arab, French, Jewish and Italian. Whitehead pays much attention to conditions of battle, including the terrain, weather, supply and troop physical and mental condi- tions. He interviewed numerous officers and men, providing names and home addresses. The tolls from enemy small arms, artillery and aerial strafing and bombardment, and sometimes from "friendly" fire are written in moving sentences, using exacting words and convey- ingbasic information, while stirring the emotions without superfluity. "You know, none of us is fit to carry Don's typewriter," his friend, Ernie Pyle, reportedly told a group of war correspondents in North Africa, as recorded by Romeiser in the intro- duction to his editing of "Beachhead Don." A few short years later, White- head joined the American forces in Korea for the AP, resulting in the award of two Pulitzer Priies. While serving as Washington bureau chief for The New York Herald 71"ibune, he wrote the first of his five books, including the bestseller, "The FBI Story." He died in Knoxville on 12 January 1981, at age 72. Calvin C. Boykin, Jr. College Station, TX r•- a~ a~ as. a•. THE BRIDGES OF VIETNAM - FROM THE JOURNALS OF A U.S. MARINE INTEL- LIGENCE OFFICER, by Fred L. Edwards, Jr. (University of North Tezas Press, 2000; 273 pp.; $18.95 -ISBN 1574411381). Historians love the wartime journals of the common soldier. These are the accounts that lend muscle and sinew to the bare bones of official communications and serve to make dry military history understandable and read- able. Unfortunately, I found that the title of this work is somewhat misleading. I suppose I expected some revelation concerning the bridges of Viet-Nam or perhaps something new about the infiltra- tion from the north, or maybe even something about our clandestine reconnaissance efforts. According to the book cover, the journals allegedly bridge the gap between the combat soldier and the MACV headquarters in Saigon. In the epilogue, Edwards explains that the bridges were based upon per- sonal experiences. 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