Selasa, 30 Juli 2013

Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

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Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein



Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

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From the author of Primary Colors, “a remarkably sensitive story of a generation” (The New York Times Book Review): The critically acclaimed true story of five Marines who fought together in a bloody battle during the Vietnam War, barely escaping with their lives, and of what happened when they came home.In 1981, while the country was celebrating the end of the Iran hostage crisis, an unemployed Vietnam veteran named Gary Cooper went berserk with a gun, angry over the jubilant welcome the hostages received in contrast to his own homecoming from Vietnam, and was killed in a fight with police. In what has been called “the most eloquent work of nonfiction to emerge from Vietnam since Michael Herr’s Dispatches” (The New York Times), Joe Klein tells Cooper’s story, as well as the stories of four of the other vets in Cooper’s platoon. The story begins with an ambush and a grisly battle in the Que Son Valley in 1967, but Payback is less about remembering the war and more about examining its long-term effects on the grunts who fought it. Klein fills in the next fifteen years of these Marines’ lives after they return home, with “the sort of fine and private detail one ordinarily finds only in fiction” (People). The experiences of these five men capture the struggles of a whole generation of Vietnam veterans and their families. Klein’s “near-hypnotic” account (Daily News, New York) is, to this day, both a remarkable piece of reporting and “some of the most vivid, harrowing, and emotionally honest writing to come out of Vietnam” (The Washington Post Book World).

Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #710959 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-27
  • Released on: 2015-10-27
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.37" h x 1.00" w x 5.50" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 416 pages
Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

Review “Extraordinarily perceptive…a remarkably sensitive story of a generation.” (Stanley Karnow The New York Times Book Review)“Klein rescues the grunt from anecdote and restores his dignity….Payback is, simply, one of the best accounts of how men respond to combat written about Vietnam or any other war…Klein’s reporting is remarkable….He brings each man to life, takes us into the battlefields between men and women, lets us see as we so rarely do the agonies and hard-won victories of growing up in working class America….He has overcome the many barriers that divided us, and has healed some of the wounds of the war.” (Esquire)“The most eloquent work of nonfiction to emerge from Vietnam since Michael Herr’s Dispatches…Mr. Klein has a brisk, instinctive talent for illuminating American lives….we come to know the five Marines as intimately as characters in a novel….Indeed, Payback has that rare quality in a book—the visceral feel of real life, pinned down and clarified through words.” (Michiko Kakutani The New York Times)“Some of the most vivid, harrowing, and emotionally honest writing to come out of Vietnam.” (The Washington Post Book World)“It’s perhaps good to be reminded just how compassionate the most informed journalism can be….Some of Klein’s most interesting reporting concerns the effect on the wives of their husbands’ experiences; he shows how supportive some of them could be….Klein’s book eloquently demonstrates that what brings these men back into the world is their own efforts: their understanding and their care for one another, their interest in something outside themselves, their brave determination.” (Peter S. Prescott Newsweek)“It’s a grim picture, painted in compelling strokes. Klein gets it all—their troubles with women, with employers, with the world—and the book must be a sober look in the mirror for the survivors. For the reader, it’s near-hypnotic.” (New York Daily News)“A rich and important book that explains a great deal about a lot of people….Payback is the story of Joe Klein’s search for the survivors of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, vintage 1967. It is a special book because it focuses in depth on the experience of five men…who were temporarily thrown together in an unpopular war.” (Chicago Sun-Times)"[Payback] captures the sort of fine and private detail one ordinarily finds only in fiction." (People)

About the Author Joe Klein is an award-winning journalist and the author of seven books, including the #1 bestseller Primary Colors. His weekly Time column, “In the Arena,” covers US politics, elections, and foreign policy and has won two National Headliner Awards for best magazine column.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Payback

PROLOGUE

The Summer of Love

In late January 1981, at the peak of the short-lived national euphoria over the return of the American hostages from Iran, I noticed a brief wire service story in one of the New York tabloids about a Vietnam veteran who had been killed by the police in Hammond, Indiana. The headline was something like: “Viet Vet Goes Berserk over Hostage Welcome.” His name was Gary Cooper and his story was, in its way, as classically American as his name. It was true that he’d been angered by the tumultuous welcome the former hostages received; there had been no parades or visits to the White House when he returned from Vietnam. But it wasn’t merely anger over the hostages that pushed Gary Cooper to the brink; indeed, that was only a small part of it. He was far more troubled by his inability to find a job since being laid off by the Pullman Standard Company nine months earlier. On January 20, the safe return of the hostages and Ronald Reagan’s inauguration shared the front page of the Hammond Times with a story of more immediate interest: Pullman was permanently closing its freight car division, and Cooper’s slim hope that he would be called back to work vanished. A week later, he learned that a job he’d hoped to get at Calumet Industries also had eluded him. Two days after that, he was dead. He was thirty-four years old. He had been born in Tennessee, but his family moved North in the great migration of poor Southern whites to the factories of the Midwest during World War II, a migration that now seemed to be reversing itself as steel mills and auto plants along the shores of the Great Lakes closed their gates and the children of the original migrants drifted back to the sun belt. Gary Cooper’s tragedy seemed a reflection of several troubling problems—the rising anger of Vietnam veterans, the legacy of the war itself, the dislocations caused by the shriveling of basic industries in the Midwest—and I decided to write a magazine article about his life and death. I spent two weeks in Hammond interviewing his friends and family. One day Barbara Cooper, Gary’s widow, lugged out an old scrapbook filled with photographs and memorabilia from Vietnam. There was a picture of Gary standing proudly at attention in hospital pajamas as he received a Purple Heart for wounds sustained in action on August 16, 1967. There were other pictures—rather touching in their innocence—of Gary and the men in his unit digging foxholes, clowning around and striking various unconvincing (and obviously staged) warlike poses. They were all so very young . . . except for one small, grizzled sergeant standing on a paddy dike, slouched, exhausted, unshaven, eyes glowing feverishly from beneath his helmet, a ninety-year-old man. On the back of the photo, Cooper had written: “S/Sgt. Malloy. Best staff NCO in the Marine Corps. KIA: 7/6/67.” There were names written on the back of several other photos, and I decided to try to locate some of the men in Cooper’s unit and find out what had happened to him in Vietnam. It was a decision that led me to write this book. In a musty, cluttered room in the Navy Annex Building in Arlington, Virginia, I found a faded microfilm roster of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, for August 1967. Listed there were Gary W. Cooper (service number: 2188001) and several of the other names from the photos, including William V. Taylor (2323311). I also found a casualty list (a partial list, I later learned) for August 16, 1967—with Cooper’s name again, as well as four others. I brought the names and service numbers to Lieutenant Joanne Schilling, a Marine Corps public relations officer. “I don’t know if we’ll be able to help you much,” she said. “I might be able to get you their hometowns—it was all so long ago, you know.” So long ago! It was . . . well, fourteen years. After several days, Lieutenant Schilling called with the information she’d promised and I began to pore over phone books at the New York Public Library, the first of many such excursions. The first name on the list was William V. Taylor. Hometown: Chicago, Illinois. There were, as might be expected, more than a few William Taylors in Chicago, but no William V. Taylor. I decided to check the suburban directories and found a William V. Taylor in Chicago Heights. “Jesus Christ,” Bill Taylor said when I told him who I was and why I was calling. “The guy that got killed over in Hammond was Gary Cooper? I’ve been living ten miles from him for fifteen years, and I didn’t even know it.” I asked if he remembered the day Cooper was wounded. “Operation Cochise,” he said immediately. “I kind of cracked that day.” “Cracked?” “Yeah, I started firing my rifle into a haystack because I thought the gooks were in there, and then someone grabbed me and I started crying. You see, we were pinned down . . .” And for the next hour, Taylor described—in remarkable detail—the events of August 16, 1967. For another hour after that, he reminisced about Vietnam and the men in his unit, giving me several more names and hometowns. Then he talked about what had happened to him since he came home. “You know, when I got back to California, they spit at me,” he said. “Who did?” “The hippies, in Anaheim. I was walking along a street. I just couldn’t believe it. It made me so goddamn angry . . . and then I couldn’t find a decent job for five years. It got so bad I even went down to the welfare office once. But now I’ve got my own insurance agency and everything’s great. Except . . . I got these lumps all over my body. I think it’s Agent Orange. We walked through that stuff in the DMZ all the time. When you talk to the other guys, see if they got lumps . . . and, listen, let me know how they are. I haven’t seen those guys in fifteen years.” When I talked to the others—and over the next few months I managed to locate twenty of them—I learned that only one had lumps, but almost all of them seemed to explode over the phone as Bill Taylor had, dying to talk about Vietnam, curious about their old friends, shocked and upset by Cooper’s death. Several said, “Hey, I never talked about this stuff before.” When I asked why not, they’d inevitably say, “No one ever asked,” or “I just didn’t feel like it,” or “They wouldn’t understand.” “Why are you talking about it now?” I’d ask. “I don’t know,” said Wayne Pilgreen of Wetumpka, Alabama, “but it feels right.” It felt right for me too. After finishing my story about Cooper, I decided to continue interviewing the men of Charlie Company’s 2nd Platoon. The treatment of Vietnam veterans—the effects of Agent Orange, post-traumatic stress disorder and even the proposed war memorial in Washington—was more in the news than ever before, but I wasn’t interested in the “issues” so much as I was intrigued by the men themselves, and what had happened to them since they’d come home. I had been a foot soldier in the antiwar movement in the 1960s, attending rallies and marches but never doing anything drastic. Like almost everyone else I knew in college, I managed to escape the draft—my son, Christopher, was born in 1967, and I received a family support deferment. In the years since, I hadn’t thought much about the men who fought and died in the war. When I did think about them, two images came to mind: the very moving protest made by Vietnam Veterans Against the War in 1971, when they’d flung their medals on the Capitol steps . . . and, more recently, a vague, media-induced sense that Vietnam veterans were angry loners, teetering on the edge of sanity, people like Gary Cooper. I’d seen some statistics which seemed to bolster that impression: By 1980, more Vietnam veterans had died since they came home than had been killed in the war. They comprised 30 percent of the nation’s prison population (about 70,000). Time magazine estimated that “something like a quarter of those who served may still be suffering from substantial psychological problems.” More than two million Americans had served in Vietnam, but they seemed to live in a different part of the world from mine. I’d met a few veterans, pressure-group types, during my years as a political reporter in Washington, but none since. It seems incredible to me now, but when my research began, I didn’t know a single Vietnam veteran; in fact, I’d never spoken at length with anyone who’d been there. I wasn’t at all prepared for the intense reactions my questions would provoke; nor was I prepared for the cascade of feelings—guilt, sadness, anger, fear, envy—the men would arouse in me. The image of Vietnam veterans as borderline cases, liable to “go berserk” at the slightest provocation, was, of course, an exaggeration. Most of the men I visited were leading useful, if not always happy, lives. And yet there was something different about them. They had lived through a horrifying experience, and none was unaffected. Some thought about the war all the time, others only a little and a few had blotted it completely from their minds. Some were repelled now by the notion of killing; others had spent the years since they’d come home trying to recapture the exhilaration, the danger and—especially—the camaraderie of battle. Some had returned violent, angry, aggressive; others were passive, paralyzed emotionally. Most, though, seemed pretty normal. They were, all of them, quite willing to share their experiences with me. None seemed to mind that I’d been “on the other side” in the 1960s—in fact, most thought I’d been lucky to avoid the whole business. The odd thing was, as my research progressed, I wasn’t so sure that I agreed with them. The more I learned, the more I wondered about how I might have reacted to the stress of battle . . . and the more I respected the sacrifices they’d made. After visiting fifteen members of Cooper’s unit, I decided to concentrate on five of them—not the five worst cases, but five who reflected a range of reactions to the war and experiences since. Two would be Cooper and Taylor, the least and the most accessible of the group, mirror images in a way, with similar backgrounds but vastly different fates. Bill Taylor led me to the third: John Steiner, an ecologist working for the Fish and Wildlife Service in California. Steiner was one of the gentlest people I’d ever met. One day, as we sat talking in his backyard, he heard a bird cry. “That’s a danger signal,” he said, leaping up, and found a mother bird nervously protecting her nest against a cat who clearly had mayhem on his mind; Steiner shooed the cat away. He was a small, almost delicate-looking man, with dark hair and a beard, and vivid blue-green eyes. “You know,” he said one day as we drove in his pickup truck to his job at the San Francisco Bay Wildlife Refuge, “I sometimes wonder how I can get so excited about protecting the salt marshes when I was so nonchalant about burning down villages fifteen years ago.” “You burned villages?” “Well, I didn’t set any hooches on fire, but I was there. One time, an old mamasan grabbed me by the sleeve, begging me to help her, patting her hooch, caressing it—it was her home, goddamnit—and I just smiled and reassured her, ‘Don’t worry,’ you know, knowing full well that the whole ville was going to be torched. I continued on down the road and I remember looking back, seeing it all in flames . . . I wonder how I could have done that.” Steiner led me to John Wakefield, who had been his squad leader for a time in Vietnam. When I called Wakefield, he sounded tentative, but agreed to let me visit him in Indianapolis. I arrived at his home a week later and found him shaking, nervous, on the brink of tears. “Since you called, I’ve been very depressed . . . or pensive,” he said. “Very pensive and withdrawn,” offered his wife, Elizabeth. “Trying to deny what you’re thinking.” “Yeah,” he said. “I haven’t really talked to anybody about what happened in the service. Some of the fun things, yeah. But the bad experiences—I’ve just completely shut them out.” I told Wakefield that he didn’t have to talk about them now either. “If you say, ‘Nice meeting you, good luck, there’s the door,’ I’ll say, ‘Fine,’ ” I said, upset with myself for triggering what appeared to be a crisis, and fearful of the consequences. “On the one hand, I want to do that,” he said. “I’ll be honest with you. On the other hand, maybe it’s time to get it all out.” “It’ll come out anyway,” Elizabeth said. “Yeah,” he agreed. He was a tall man, with dark hair, trifocals and a recent paunch, who worked in quality control for a huge General Motors subsidiary nearby, and seemed much older than any of the other men I’d visited; he was, however, only thirty-seven. He suggested that he go along with me to see Bill Taylor in Chicago, which was my next stop. “I want someone else who went through it to be there when I talk about it, because I’m scared to death. There’s a physical bond . . . when you go through something that was hell, as that day was,” he said, referring to August 16, 1967—Operation Cochise, the day Cooper was wounded and Taylor cracked. “I’ve been through a few of them days. Bill Taylor too . . . I realize I’m putting you in a bad spot . . .” “No,” I said, “I’m putting you in a bad spot.” “No, it’s just . . .” “You’re doing me a favor.” “You may be doing me a favor,” he said, and we began a journey that would prove surprising and painful for John Wakefield, but also—as of this writing—worthwhile. The fifth man was Dale Szuminski, whose name I found on the casualty list for August 16, 1967. He was easy enough to locate—there weren’t nearly so many Dale Szuminskis in Erie, Pennsylvania, as there’d been Bill Taylors in Chicago. Szuminski was a postman, but said over the phone, “I spent the first ten years after I got back doing nothing. I don’t know why.” When I visited Szuminski in Erie, we immediately went to the Frontier Lounge, where his friend Joey Bruno—“It seems like all my friends were in the Marines,” Szuminski said—was tending bar and insisted on pouring shot after shot of Jack Daniel’s for the visitor from New York. I drove home that night with one eye squinting at three sets of white dashes dividing the highway. “You ready to crash?” Szuminski had said when I dragged him from the Frontier Lounge. “Jeez, I was just getting started.” “It’s two in the morning,” I said. “So what? I don’t have to be at work till seven.” As inevitable a choice as the five of them—Cooper, Taylor, Steiner, Wakefield and Szuminski—seemed for my purposes, a fairly serious question remained: What were my purposes? It was obvious that the five could in no way be construed as a cross section of Vietnam veterans. For one thing, they were all white. There hadn’t been many blacks or Hispanics in the 2nd Platoon of Charlie Company in 1967—mostly the luck of the draw, but partly because it was early in the war and the Marines were composed primarily of enlistees, who tended to be white in those days, before the increased pay and perquisites of the all-volunteer armed forces made military life a more attractive path of upward mobility for minorities. That all five had enlisted was, in itself, untypical of most Vietnam veterans. Nor did they represent the geographic, social or intellectual diversity I’d come to expect among American fighting men from the World War II novels and movies. They were—except for Steiner, who came from California and was a bit more affluent—distinctly Midwestern, blue collar, high school graduates. Taylor, Szuminski and Wakefield were Catholic; Steiner and Cooper, Protestant. Although several became sergeants in the field, none was an officer. They were grunts, pure and simple. This is not a book about the plight of Vietnam veterans. Steiner, for one, didn’t feel at all mistreated. He’d taken full advantage of the veterans benefits available to him after the war and, he said, “made out like a fat rat.” Nor did any of the others want sympathy, although several tended to overstate their woes and attribute all their troubles to Vietnam, figuring (at first, at least) that I was interested in them only because I wanted to write a book about their problems, which wasn’t my purpose at all.I My intention was simply to write about five men who had fought together in Vietnam, and what had happened to them when they came home. They had been through a remarkable experience: not just the war, but returning to a country where all the ground rules had changed, from what a girl might “do” on a first date to basic attitudes about work, family and authority. It would have been a difficult transition even if they hadn’t been reviled when they came home, even if they hadn’t lost. Dale Szuminski was the first of the five to join Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, in July 1966; he was nineteen years old. Gary Cooper, also nineteen, arrived in December. Throughout late 1966 and early 1967, they guarded the airstrip being constructed at Khe Sanh, in the far north of South Vietnam. It was cold, rainy and uncomfortable in that mountainous region, but not particularly dangerous. In fact, their unit was distinguished by its complete inability to make contact with the enemy; it was called “Chickenshit Charlie” by the rest of the battalion. Their only fire fight occurred when a patrol was attacked by a bear one day; the bear was blown away, and just about everyone present took credit for the kill. In late February 1967, the 1st Battalion was sent to Okinawa for resupply—the men were given the new M-16 rifles—and retraining as a Special Landing Force. In the future, Charlie Company would be based on an aircraft carrier off the coast and helicoptered into hot spots. They were joined in Okinawa by Bill Taylor, who was nineteen years old and green as green could be, and John Wakefield, who was by far the most experienced of the group. He was also the oldest, twenty-two at the time. Wakefield had been a member of an elite Force Reconnaissance unit whose job it often had been to penetrate North Vietnam in small patrols, monitoring the traffic on the Ho Chi Minh Trail and performing “interrogations” of local officials. He had been a sergeant, but was busted to corporal for borrowing a truck and stealing bananas from a private girls’ school during a drunken spree in Hue. In December 1966, he wrecked his knee diving from a helicopter into a hot landing zone in Laos, and spent the next few months recuperating on Okinawa. When he recovered, he was told there were no openings in Force Reconnaissance, and was assigned to the 2nd Platoon of Charlie Company, which he considered a more serious demotion than losing a stripe. He wore camouflage fatigues, had an imposing handlebar moustache and carried a K-Bar knife, which distinguished him from everyone else, who wore green fatigues, weren’t allowed moustaches and didn’t carry knives; less apparent was his quiet but overwhelming arrogance. Wakefield considered himself the best Marine he’d ever met. To the others, though, he was just another new guy. Wakefield was greeted by Staff Sergeant John J. Malloy, also a newcomer to Charlie Company, but a longtime Marine (it was said that he’d fought in Korea) who had quickly established himself as the most respected man in the unit. Malloy took a look at Wakefield’s service record and told him that he could expect a much different war now. “We got a bunch of green kids here,” Malloy said. “But we’ll get them through.” Wakefield, pleased to be included in the “we’ll,” said, “You bet we will.” It was a much different war not only for Wakefield but also for the others. They were in almost daily contact with the enemy now. Most of the time it was frustrating, fleeting contact—Viet Cong snipers picking away at them, mines being tripped. Szuminski was wounded slightly in the arm by shrapnel from a mine in June; the wound wasn’t nearly so bad as the sight of the man who’d been walking in front of him, whose stomach had been ripped open. They were based on the USS Okinawa but didn’t spend much time there. They would be out in the bush for weeks on end, then return to the ship for a day or two, only to be sent out on another operation. There were hot meals on the ship, fresh clothes (their uniforms tended to rot off them after several weeks in the bush) and showers. It was the only place in Vietnam that they felt completely safe. John Steiner joined them in the field in June. He was the youngest of the five, still just eighteen years old. He had arrived in Vietnam the previous November, but had spent the past five months recuperating on Okinawa after breaking his foot in a rope-climbing drill during retraining exercises. Cooper, Taylor, Steiner, Wakefield and Szuminski served together in the 2nd Platoon for the next two months, mid-June to mid-August 1967, a time that was being celebrated by certain of their contemporaries back home as the “Summer of Love.” In early July, Charlie Company took part in its first major battle, against North Vietnamese regulars at Con Thien in the Demilitarized Zone. The battle lasted several days, the men endured a horrendous mortar barrage, but there were surprisingly few casualties . . . and only one that would be remembered years later. Staff Sergeant John J. Malloy was killed early in the battle by a recoilless-rifle shell, an anti-tank weapon, while trying to reinforce a squad pinned down by enemy fire. The shell hit him on the left side of his chest. He was knocked six feet in the air, and flipped over. Everyone knew, immediately, that he was dead, but they could not retrieve his body until the North Vietnamese were forced to retreat several days later. A small party of men were sent out to get the body. Wakefield, Steiner, Cooper and Szuminski were among them. Wakefield remembered someone reaching down to brush the flies from Malloy’s face, then pulling his hand back in horror at the touch. No one said anything. No one cried. They wrapped him in a poncho liner and carried him to a medevac helicopter. Years later, some of the men would be moved to tears by the memory of the little staff sergeant who’d shepherded them through their first months in the bush. They would remember his fairness above all else, which even extended to the way he opened cases of C rations. A case contained twelve meals, each labeled on the top. Most platoon sergeants opened the top of the box and gave the officers first choice. Malloy opened the box upside down, so no one knew which meal they were choosing and a private had as much chance of getting something good, like beef slices, as a lieutenant; when people began to figure out where the best meals were positioned in each case, Malloy went so far as to switch them around. He was replaced by Staff Sergeant Theodore Kochmaruk, who was considered competent enough by the men, but opened cases of C rations from the top and always gave the officers first choice. There was no memorial service for Sergeant Malloy. There was little discussion afterward, but many had the same thought: If Malloy, who knew what he was doing, could get himself blown away so easily, what chance did they have? The effect on morale was shattering, but the only acknowledgment that they had suffered a grievous loss was initiated by Robert Smith, the platoon’s best photographer. He asked his parents to make seventeen copies of a picture he’d taken of Malloy several weeks before his death. It was the photo of the sergeant, hunched beneath his pack, that I’d first seen in Cooper’s album and would later find, time and again, in musty albums pulled from the top shelves of closets across the country. Malloy’s death was one of two vivid memories that Cooper, Taylor, Steiner, Wakefield and Szuminski would share. The other was the ambush that took place on August 16, 1967, during Operation Cochise . . . and since it was the last day the five would spend together in Vietnam, it is probably where the story of their return from the war should begin. I. My arrival in their lives did cause some disruptions—and, in Wakefield’s case, a major change—which I’ll deal with in the final section of this book. Obviously, all—except Cooper—were willing subjects, which raised the question of showboating. I tried, wherever possible, to check their stories with other sources, but often had to depend on their version of the events of their lives and my own ability to separate what was likely from what was not.


Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

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Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. As a Viet Nam veteran, I am saddened by ... By parkman As a Viet Nam veteran, I am saddened by how shabbily the combat vets were treated. I was lucky...I came back to a profession and a family. And just as importantly, or more so perhaps, I was not in combat, much less in an ambush where my buddies were killed or maimed. Joe Klein's book highlights the need to welcome our veterans back, and thank them for their service. It is well-written, and forces me to think about things that I would rather not think about. The Veterans Administration is swamped with problems that civilians cannot fully understand, but must honor and join in finding solutions. Thank you, Mr. Klein.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Four Stars By Diana Interesting insight into the impact of war on our soldiers.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Gift for my brother. By Jean Castorina My brother requested a book named "payback" and there are about 2,000 books with that name. With the detailed explanation, I was able to decipher that THIS was the book he wanted... and yes, it was EXACTLY what was defined, and it came in a timely manner. MY BROTHER WAS EXTREMELY PLEASED.

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Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein
Payback: Five Marines After Vietnam, by Joe Klein

Senin, 29 Juli 2013

Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely

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Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel



Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel

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Conquistador Voices, a two-volume work intended for the general reader, presents the Spanish Conquest of the Americas principally through the voices of those who participated in that historic event. The story is told in five parts, each part featuring a principal actor. In volume I are described the four voyages of Christopher Columbus and the conquest of Mexico by Hernán Cortés, some details of which come to us through native accounts. Volume II opens with the voyages to Peru of Francisco Pizarro and his brothers, their seizure of the Inca empire, and the long, bloody, and self-destructive sequel to this Spanish campaign. This is followed by an account of the remarkable, years-long sojourn of Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca through the deserts of North America, as well as his subsequent mission to today's Paraguay. The final section of volume II tells the tale of Hernando de Soto's ill-starred expedition to North America, an expedition in which Soto himself lost his life. The sweep of the drama is roughly from 1490 to 1550, with the action moving from the West Indies to Mexico, then to Peru, today's southeastern US, Mexico again, Paraguay, and back to the US--and containing accounts of two desperate escapes by sea. Somewhat in the manner of a television documentary, the story is told by the conquistadors themselves or the men who accompanied them in "sound bites", with background and connecting narrative supplied by the author in whatever amount necessary to ensure an engaging and readable tale. Most of the original material is from eyewitness and participant sources, with some material "as told to" a later chronicler. An effort has been made to avoid moralizing on these events, but to report them--with all due filtering of wheat from chaff--as we have been told that they occurred. Nine maps accompany the text of Vol I, 8 maps Vol II. An index, copious footnotes, and brief bibliography are included in each volume.

Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #137682 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .77" w x 6.00" l, 1.00 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 340 pages
Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel

Review A nuanced view . . . . Clear and engaging with minimal biased commentary.  Perfect for anyone looking for a more in-depth look at the Spanish conquistadors, and interested in them as three-dimensional and not just distant figures. . . . An interesting and wide-ranging look at a critical period in history. - Foreword Reviews Clearly a labor of love. - Publishers WeeklyExhaustively researched, exceptionally well written, impressively organized and presented, . . . very highly recommended for both community and academic library world history reference collections in general, and Spanish conquistador supplemental studies lists in particular. – Midwest Book ReviewThis book should be promoted in universities and in US social organizations where there are many second-and third-generation Latinos who have no idea of their origins in this country, and who would be very much enriched by reading this book. – Opciones magazineIt’s not very often that a book as necessary as it is interesting lands on our desk. . . .  A refreshing account . . . This English-language work ought to be required reading in US Latino academic circles. . . . A welcome literary effort. – Gente de Exito magazine

From the Back Cover If all you know about the conquistadors is what you learned in school, this book may be for you.This is not a standard history book, but rather a sort of television documentary in written form. In it you will hear the voices of the conquistadors themselves as they tell you--through a series of "sound bites" that they themselves have provided--what they saw and did during the Conquest. These voices have been brought together and context established by the author as narrator, to provide you with a vivid, streamlined, and overall compelling reading experience.The entire sweep of the Conquest is covered in two volumes of adventure--Christopher Columbus and Hernán Cortés in Volume I, and Francisco Pizarro, Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, and Hernando de Soto in Volume II. You'll be whisked from the islands of the Indies to central America, Mexico, Peru, today's southeastern US, Mexico again, Paraguay, and back to the US, in the process having to embark on two desperate escapes by sea.Delve into these five narratives--a one-stop Conquest summary for the general reader--and you should come away with a fuller and more realistic appreciation of those epic times than you may have ever had before.

About the Author Kevin H. Siepel writes on personal, historical, and environmental themes. His benchmark biography of Confederate cavalry officer John S. Mosby has proven durable, as has his biography of western New York state pioneer Joseph Bennett, which also broke new ground. Siepel's essays and articles have appeared in the Christian Science Monitor, Foreign Service Journal, Civil War, Wild West, two Chicken Soup for the Soul volumes, and elsewhere. One of his Monitor essays was translated into several languages and published worldwide by Readers Digest. Siepel lives in western New York state.


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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A good read By Working Pro Singer This is the first account I have read of the European discovery of Mexico. I am now going to read volume 2.

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Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel

Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel

Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel
Conquistador Voices (vol I): The Spanish Conquest of the Americas as Recounted Largely by the Participants (Volume 1), by Kevin H Siepel

Minggu, 28 Juli 2013

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

Germans In Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing. In undergoing this life, numerous individuals always attempt to do as well as obtain the very best. New knowledge, experience, driving lesson, and everything that could enhance the life will be done. Nevertheless, numerous individuals in some cases really feel puzzled to get those things. Feeling the minimal of experience and sources to be much better is one of the lacks to possess. Nevertheless, there is a quite basic point that could be done. This is just what your teacher always manoeuvres you to do this one. Yeah, reading is the solution. Reviewing a book as this Germans In Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing and other referrals can enrich your life top quality. How can it be?

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing



Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

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The first German immigrants arrived in Louisville nearly two hundred years ago. By 1850, they represented nearly 20 percent of the population, and they influenced every aspect of daily life, from politics to fine art. In 1861, Moses Levy opened the famed Levy Brothers department store. Kunzs The Dutchman Restaurant was established as a wholesale liquor establishment in 1892 and then became a delicatessen and, finally, a restaurant in 1941. Carl Christian Brenner, an emigrant from Lauterecken, Bavaria, gained notoriety as the most important Kentucky landscape artist of the nineteenth century. C. Robert and Victoria A. Ullrich edit a collection of historical essays about German immigrants and their fascinating past in the Derby City.

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #789744 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-12
  • Released on: 2015-10-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .31" w x 6.00" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages
Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

About the Author C. Robert Ullrich is a Louisville native and a fourth-generation German American. He is an alumnus of the University of Louisville and the University of Illinois. He recently retired from the University of Louisville, where he was a professor of civil and environmental engineering for thirty-eight years. He is a member of the German-American Club Gesangverein, the Society for German-American Studies and the Sister Cities of Louisville Mainz Committee. Victoria A. Birchler Ullrich, a Louisville native, is a fourth-generation German American and Swiss American. She is an alumna of the University of Louisville and a former medical technologist, having been employed in clinical and research laboratories. She is a member of the German-American Club Gesangverein, and is the president of its Germanic Heritage Auxiliary. She is a member of the Swiss American Historical Society, the Swiss Ladies Society and the Society for German-American Studies.


Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five Stars By Michael W. Harper Very interesting book if you have German ancestors.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five Stars By Barbra Cothron Fantastic Book.

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Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing
Germans in Louisville: (American Heritage)From Arcadia Publishing

Rabu, 24 Juli 2013

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Selasa, 23 Juli 2013

United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

Guide United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, By Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley will certainly always provide you favorable value if you do it well. Completing the book United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, By Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley to check out will certainly not become the only objective. The objective is by getting the positive worth from guide up until the end of the book. This is why; you need to learn even more while reading this United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, By Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley This is not just exactly how fast you check out a publication and also not only has how many you completed the books; it has to do with what you have actually obtained from the books.

United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley



United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

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United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #304103 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-27
  • Released on: 2015-10-27
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 12.67" h x 1.46" w x 8.58" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 404 pages
United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

About the Author

Greg E. Mathieson Sr. served 11 years in the U.S. army before founding the MAI Photo News Agency in 1981. During his career as a photojournalist, he has served clients such as the U.S. Secret Service, FEMA, The U.S. Justice Department, and the military. His photographs have appeared in Life, Time, Newsweek, US News and World Report, The New York Times, Paris Match, and many more reputable publications in over 64 countries. Mathieson was selected by NBC news to serve as a videographer in an exclusive covert team covering the 2003 war in Iraq, and his work from this expedition has been featured on both NBC and ABC news networks. His extensive experience working behind the front lines of international conflicts has earned Mathieson the trust and respect of world leaders in the White House and abroad, allowing him unprecedented assess to protected information and images.


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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful. Be aware of minor errors in the 2nd Edition By n [[VIDEOID:mo27A6LTE8ZZUZU]]Manuscript of Video: Hello all, this is my review of US Naval Special Warfare USNS by Greg E. Mathieson Sr. and David Gatley. Now I want to start off with the aesthetics of the book. This is a very well made and a beautiful piece of binding. Synthetic black leather, a bronze seal with a protruding depiction of the northern hemisphere and a special warfare insignia all covered with gold plating. The pages of the book are both sown and glued, for the optimal reading experience. The pictures of the contributing authors are astounding, with many of them being never before seen and behind the scenes glimpses of these esoteric organizations. If you are looking for a sensationalist, partisan bashing and political book, this isn't for you. This material deals solely on the technical aspects of Naval Special Warfare, with the writing done in an easy to read, forward and factual way. It covers everything from the men and women who stock the supplies that the SEALS use in the field, towards the actual operations themselves. The book includes the origins of naval special warfare in WW2 towards what the US military will employ in the future. This work also has several other goodies inside such as a letter from the former president for this book alone, the creed of the Navy Seals, statements from the contributing authors and so on...Now, for the negatives.The reason I gave this book 3 stars was mainly due to the ubiquitous and rather alarming spelling and grammar errors present on almost 50% pages on the book. When a person is willing to dish out $70 on a book touted across the media as a superlative photo/writing documentation of Naval Special Warfare, you expect a work just like that. At this price point, there shouldn't be any errors, especially ones that are so simple and easy an 8th grader can fix them. On almost every photo description there lies a spelling or grammar mistake. I got into the habit of marking them with blue or pink tabs, but there were actually so many I ran out. The person who typed these photo descriptions should get these revised, as it is the only thing that is keeping this book from being perfectHowever, it is truly a remarkable book, but I wanted to give a heads up to any future buyers of this book, give them that info to make an educated decision.-NOTE-I would be happy to post the errors + the page number, but such work is very long and tedious and I just wanted to get this review started. I may post them if it generates a little interest.

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful. The BEST Military Book and Tribute I've Ever Seen !! By Robert J. Demarco I can't see anybody who was ever in the NAVY or knows some who is, not buying this book. It is the Heart & Soul of what these Courageous Americans do for our Freedom. The Photography is Stellar ! The Access to these Special Ops is Unprecedented. I've Never had a look inside the world of the US Naval Special Warfare / Seals such as this book reveals. A gift that will be treasured for a Lifetime. If you want someone to know what the SEALS are about…GET THEM THIS BOOK !!!

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Great Photography and Info on Navy SEALS By Al B. Back Great Christmas present for that military fan in your life. The authors had terrific access to get photos of things I have never seen depicted before.

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United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley
United States Naval Special Warfare: U.S. Navy SEALs, by Greg E. Mathieson Sr., David Gatley

Sabtu, 20 Juli 2013

Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

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Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

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Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

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First published more than 100 years ago, Hardtack And Coffee is John Billings’ absorbing first-person account of the everyday life of a U.S. Army soldier during the Civil War. Billings attended a reunion of Civil War veterans in 1881 that brought together a group of survivors whose memories and stories of the war compelled him to write this account. It is set in November, 1860. Lincoln has been elected as President of the United States. The Democrats split into two factions, divided over the issue of slavery. As early as October, Southern politicians decide that the state of South Carolina should withdraw from the union. Georgia, Alabama, Mississipi are among the states who seceded from the Union, creating the South Confederacy. On the 15th April, Lincoln issues a proclamation that will send 75,000 militia to suppress the rebellion for three months. ‘Hard Tack and Coffee’ is the story of one of those ‘Minute Men’. John D Billings describes in rich detail the daily routine of a foot soldier as the Civil War developed. Recruitment became conscription, provisions became rations, tents became ‘bomb-proofs’, and the muzzle-loading rifle became breech-loaded. In this unique account, we are given the first-hand account of life as a Massachusetts soldier, from conscription and training through to camp-life at discipline. First published in 1887, ‘Hard Tack and Coffee’ is a gripping military memoir that promises to deliver a new insight into the Civil War. Albion Press is an imprint of Endeavour Press, the UK's leading independent digital publisher. For more information on our titles please sign up to our newsletter at www.endeavourpress.com. Each week you will receive updates on free and discounted ebooks. Follow us on Twitter: @EndeavourPress and on Facebook via http://on.fb.me/1HweQV7. We are always interested in hearing from our readers. Endeavour Press believes that the future is now.

Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #9400 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-05
  • Released on: 2015-10-05
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

From the Back Cover Most histories of the Civil War focus on battles and top brass. Hardtack and Coffee is one of the few to give a vivid, detailed picture of what ordinary soldiers endured every day--in camp, on the march, at the edge of a booming, smoking hell.

About the Author Contributing an introduction and index to this Bison Books edition is William L. Shea, a professor of history at the University of Arkansas, Monticello. His books include The Virginia Militia in the Seventeenth Century and, with Earl Hess, Pea Ridge: Civil War Campaign in the West.


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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful. Civil War from the soldier's point of view By David E. Levine There are numerous histories of the Civil War and some have become classics. Most of these focus on battles and great heroes. Billings, however, a Civil War veteran, writes about the daily life of the average soldier. We learn about the soldier's motivation to fight, camp discipline, diet, housing, medical care, recreation and just about everything else that comprised the life of the Civil War era soldier. Billings' book is serious yet he manages to write in a lighthearted tone, replete with levity. This is a great book to round out a Civil War buff's study of the great conflict.

23 of 24 people found the following review helpful. Not for the casual reader, but a must for the fanatic By Mark Hatala I teach a university class on the experience of the American Civil War, and I use sections of this book to illustrate camp life and the life of the average soldier.Billings tells his story as a humanist and has a real eye for detail. His descriptions (and the illustrations) are invaluable.This book is not for someone with only a passing interest in the American Civil War; one must know something of the era to appreciate it. It is a must-read for a true fanatic.

14 of 15 people found the following review helpful. Great Fun for All Ages! By A Customer I would have loved to had this book when I was a child. The non-linearity of the chapters makes it a perfect "browser's book" -- a book which you can pick up and flip open to any page and read interesting, amusing and humorous accounts of day to day life in the Civil War army. This is one of the most fun books I've picked up in a long time.

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Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings
Hardtack & Coffee or The Unwritten Story of Army Life, by John D. Billings

Selasa, 16 Juli 2013

Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir, by Michael White

Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir, by Michael White

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Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir, by Michael White

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“This book is a treasure and a guide. It is a type of healing for the intellect and the heart.” - (Rebecca Lee)

A lyrical and intimate account of how a poet, in the midst of a bad divorce, finds consolation and grace through viewing the paintings of Vermeer, in six world cities. In the midst of a divorce (in which the custody of his young daughter is at stake) and over the course of a year, the poet Michael White, travels to Amsterdam, The Hague, Delft, London, Washington, and New York to view the paintings of Johannes Vermeer, an artist obsessed with romance and the inner life.  He is astounded by how consoling it is to look closely at Vermeer’s women, at the artist’s relationship to his subjects, and at how composition reflects back to the viewer such deep feeling. Includes the author’s very personal study of Vermeer. Through these travels and his encounters with Vermeer’s radiant vision, White finds grace and personal transformation.

"White brings [sensitivity] to his luminous readings of the paintings.  An enchanting book about the transformative power of art."  - (Kirkus Reviews) 

"… Figures it took a poet to get it this beautifully, thrillingly right.” - (Peter Trachtenberg)

"A unique dance among genres...clear and powerful descriptions touch on the mysteries of seduction, loss, and the artistic impulse."   - (Clyde Edgerton)

Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir, by Michael White

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #207751 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-03-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.30" h x .60" w x 5.40" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 192 pages
Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir, by Michael White

Review “An artistic treasure hunt....Following Vermeer grants White another kind of distance, allowing him to vanish into Vermeer''s dream, then return refreshed to his own.” (New York Times Book Review)“Reading Travels in Vermeer made Vermeer’s paintings so emotionally real to me that by the end of the book I felt as if I knew them―as if they were characters in a marvelous novel about lost love, desire, and healing. ” (The Paris Review Daily)“Through his obsession with Vermeer, White has crafted a powerful and affecting memoir that reminds us how art can be salvation.” (Publishers Weekly)“White''s descriptions are sensuous, precise and evocative. . . . luminous readings of the paintings. An enchanting book about the transformative power of art.” (Kirkus Reviews)“A wise and clever book.” (The Sewanee Review)

About the Author Michael White is the author of four collections of poetry and a memoir, Travels in Vermeer (Persea 2015), and has published widely in respected periodicals, including The Paris Review, The New Republic, The Kenyon Review, Ploughshares, Western Humanities Review, and the Best American Poetry. His most recent collection is Persea’s Vermeer in Hell, winner of the Rudnitsky Editor’s Choice Award.  White teaches poetry and is presently chair of the Creative Writing department at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington.


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful. A Journey of Life and Art By Gail J. Peck I have read countless memoirs, but never one quite like this. The structure is a tour de force in its weaving of an appreciation for Vermeer's art, and the sadness over a divorce, especially because the fate of a child is involved. If the concentration on Vermeer is the larger portion, that can only be because of the sheer joy of White's travels and his love for the art. The failed marriage looms in the background. You will turn each page eagerly to follow alongside in this journey that goes forward and backward. White's poetic eye lingers upon Vermeer's various paintings so that you feel you are standing before them. I have never been to the Netherlands, and yet now I feel I have. I have never been through a divorce, but can imagine the pain. It may be fairly easy to divide up a household, but there is no fair way to decide custody of a child. Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir is a study of both life and art and how they intersect.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. The Art of Vermeer and the Art of Seeing By John Drury When I was in the Army, studying German in the language school in Monterey, I bought a used copy of Aldous Huxley’s The Art of Seeing. I expected the book to explain how to observe and notice things, but it was actually Huxley’s account of how he restored his eyesight. He practiced two exercises, both of which he invented: fluttering your eyelids rapidly; scrunching your eyes tightly and holding that isometric pose.Michael White’s marvelous Travels in Vermeer really does demonstrate the art of seeing, which turns out to encompass the art of feeling, as well as the art of being. The reader learns a lot about Vermeer, such as the interesting detail that “the vanishing point of many of Vermeer’s interiors is marked with a tiny pinhole.” White discovers a couple of those pinholes in his intense but relaxed in-person examinations of the paintings, a scrutiny that reminds me of how Rilke looked at a panther for many hours in a zoo in Paris before composing his poem “Der Panther.”The book is rich in discoveries, such as a moment when White is studying “A Lady Standing at a Virginal” and says “I hadn’t noticed the doubled shadows at first. The patterns of light and shade are too ‘natural’ to make much of an impression. It’s a phenomenon we deal with unconsciously, on a retinal level. In the case of the famous earring, for instance, the eye takes in two brushstrokes—and we fill in the rest unaware.”But the reader also learns a great deal about White, who is movingly open about the Proustian moments of his life. Since he is primarily a poet, it’s not surprising that those scenes are highly compressed and imagistic, such as the story of how his mother kicked him out when he was thirteen, pulling her car into the “strange apartment complex” where his father lived, making him drag his mattress onto the grass, and driving away without a word. White is equally poignant and exact in recounting stories about serving in the Navy, joining A.A., going on dates with two women he met through Match.com, and having his first kiss with a girl named Cheryl on her grandmother’s front porch.In discussing the “pair of ladies at the virginals” in the National Gallery in London, White remarks that “Vermeer offers an anatomy of love, both virtuous and carnal.” But that’s also what he accomplishes in this memoir, in which his gaze at Vermeer’s paintings also takes in his experiences with his two wives. After all, the book begins with a dramatic scene when his estranged and much younger second wife shows up at his house and he looks at her through the four small panes of his front door, not letting her in, even though she’s bearing two vanilla custard pies and her raincoat is “absurdly open on the lightly freckled swell of her breasts.”White points out that there are “moments when the terms of one’s own life are irrevocably changed by simply looking into a lover’s eye, when crazed with love or parting or sorrow.” He goes on to surmise, “What if a painter painted virtually nothing but such moments? What if he held his immense gifts in reserve, solely for such states of recognition? This is what Vermeer did. In the event of our arrival—that moment when, occupied with their music lesson or holding a glass of wine—his women turn and look and almost exclaim, ‘It’s you.’”In London, toward the end of his travels in Vermeer, White arrives at the Queen’s Gallery in Buckingham Palace near closing time. The attendant at the counter guides him to Vermeer’s “The Music Lesson” and makes the observation, “So you’re a writer, eh? Traveling the world, seeing the Vermeers, and writing a book about it, are you?” It’s a funny, wonderful moment, one of many pleasures in this absorbing book, which I recommend highly.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Dr. White shares his life and travels to see Vermeer Paintings all over the world. By Best Gameplayer Great book by Dr. White, head of Creative Writing at UNC-Wilmington, in N.C. After several books of poetry, Dr. White has written a glorious memoir and shared his triumphs, difficult times and the detailed fascination with Vermeer paintings that he immerses himself within in his many travels around the world. Every word and sentence is carefully formed, so read it slowly. Dr. White is brave enough to share his life through very detailed writing, so it is an honor to read this book.

See all 16 customer reviews... Travels in Vermeer: A Memoir, by Michael White


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Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

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Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender



Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

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It was another glorious victory for the Mighty Avengers. Good triumphed over evil and Ultron was shot into space, never to be seen again. Or so they thought. Now, years later, the homicidal artificial intelligence - so long devoted to ending life on Earth - has a new world to conquer...one with its own horrific legacy. When Titan, birthplace of Thanos, falls, Planet Ultron rises in its place! Thanos' brother Starfox must seek the aid of his former allies - but the Avengers he finds are radically different from the ones he once knew. Among them is Ultron's creator Giant-Man - and when Hank Pym confronts his now planet-sized "son," the responsibilities of fatherhood have never loomed so large. Rick Remender (Uncanny Avengers) and Jerome Opeña (Avengers) unleash the full robotic rage of Ultron on Earth's Mightiest Heroes!

Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #175167 in Books
  • Brand: Marvel
  • Published on: 2015-03-31
  • Released on: 2015-03-31
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 11.25" h x .38" w x 7.50" l, 1.06 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 112 pages
Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

About the Author Rick Remender is an American comic book writer and artist who resides in Portland, Oregon. He is best known for his work on Marvel Comics' Punisher series, as well as Fear Agent, Uncanny X-Force, and Venom. Jerome Opeña is a Filipino comic book artist best known for his numerous collaborations with writer Rick Remender.


Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender

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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful. Ultron is Back: And you shall FEAR his MILD IRRITATION! By Woodaba Rick Remender has been working away at his own little corner of the Marvel Universe for some time now, and Rage of Ultron is the latest installment in...whatever the hell he's been doing. While this book is somewhat self-contained, it makes reference to events that may make some readers tilt their heads, and includes the current Avengers team - FalconCap, FemThor, most notably. However, the important stuff is explained pretty clearly for newer readers. There has been some confusion, but Remender has confirmed that this book is in-canon with the main Marvel Universe, apparently post Secret Wars.Rage of Ultron begins with a flashback that shows the classic Avengers defeating Ultron in a grand final battle, before shooting him into space. This is a great scene, filled with awesome character moments for both Ultron, Hank Pym, and the rest of the Avengers. Unfortunately, I can't help but feel that it goes on a bit too long, as it robs the proper story of a lot of space in an already compressed format, and leaves the rest of the book feeling a tad rushed. The main story proper cuts to the present day, and, just as the Avengers are having a debate over the ethics of Hank Pym developing technology to kill artificial intelligence, Ultron pops round for a visit, like that awkward, crazy uncle every family has. Except this time, he's calling himself Planet Ultron, and with good reason...I have to say, I do like this story, overall. Remender can be hit or miss for me, but this is definitely a hit...if not exactly a critical one. The main problem comes from the fact that the story feels very compressed: most of the characters come across as pretty flat, with the exception of Vision and Hank Pym, and even then the two are defined mostly by "I'm a real boy!" arguments and incessant whining respectively. There are some fantastic ideas: Planet Ultron, Ultron's Evil Plan, a team of Ultronvengers, but none are given too much focus or exploration before it's time to move onto the next action beat. Said action beats are very good, but unfortunately, Opena's otherwise gorgeous art has a tendency to falter here, and on a few panels I had to make an effort to figure out what exactly was going on. For the most part it's fine, though. Also, for a book that's all about exploring the relationship between Hank Pym and his son, Hank himself is given surprisingly little focus. Thankfully, the same cannot be said of Ultron.When marketing this book, Marvel referred to it as Ultron's Killing Joke and I see why. Despite gaining a completely inexplicable power boost, he remains a thoroughly menacing villain throughout, getting a lot of great moments and a fair few insights into his character and his motivations as well. It's probably my favorite portrayal of the villain, and a huge improvement over his wasted portrayal in the woeful Age of Ultron event comic.And then we get to the ending, which will probably be the most divisive aspect of this book, and appears to have split the fanbase down the middle. Fans of Hank Pym are unlikely to be particularly impressed, and I feel that Marvel kinds of sidelines him in something that's, at least partially, meant to be his story. The possible future for Pym set up by the cliffhanger ending is interesting, however. My main problem with the ending is how Ultron defeated. It combines almost every trope assosciated with rubbish, cop-out endings that have unfortunately become somewhat synonymous with these big Avengers stories. I don't want to spoil, but suffice to say, a villain as great as Ultron deserved a much, MUCH, better defeat than the one he received here.Overall, I'm somewhat conflicted on this book. There are a lot of things to like, just as there are a lot of things to dislike. If I could give this book 3.5 stars, I would, but let's be generous and round up to four stars.TL;DR:PROS:- Ultron is awesome- Great concepts- Beautiful artwork- Some interesting discussion on AI in the Marvel Universe- Some great action beatsCONS:- Weak ending- Feels rushed- Mixed bag portrayal of Hank Pym- Good ideas not used enough

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Does artificial intelligence have a soul, and if so, does shutting one down equate to murder? By Matt Anderson This is an original graphic novel from Marvel.Here's the premise: So, there has always been different iterations of Ultron. He is constantly evolving and upgrading himself, so over the years the Avengers have faced many different versions of this artificial intelligence.In the past, the Avengers defeated Ultron in a battle, and sent the defeated robot away in a space craft. This version of Ultron has now returned to Earth for revenge, and there is one emotion that defines his motivation - rage.Although I often like Remender's work, this wasn't a particularly original story. The big philosophical question within these pages is one we've heard before. Does artificial intelligence have a soul, and if so, does shutting one down equate to murder?The highlight of this book for me was gaining a new appreciation for Hank Pym. He is often remembered for all of the mistakes he has made instead of all of the good that he has done. I know that I'm guilty of thinking about him in a negative light. Because he narrates part of this story, we get to see him dealing with legitimate questions. For example, although he is a founding member of the Avengers, he isn't respected by his teammates (old and new) in the same way that people like Captain America (not a founding member) and Iron Man are. Why is this?SPOILERS FOR THE END OF THIS BOOK AND OTHER MARVEL TITLES:I'm pretty sure there is one continuity flaw in this book related to Hank Pym. In this book he appears as Giant Man and is killed towards the end of the story. Meanwhile, in Jonathan Hickman's "Avengers" storyline, "Time Runs Out," Hank Pym appears as Yellowjacket and has been working with the Illuminati to help stop the collapse of the Multiverse. In fact, during the timeline of this event (which we can place pretty specifically because of a line from Wasp concerning events from "Uncanny Avengers," not to mention the versions of Thor and Captain America that are in this book) I believe that Hank Pym is traveling the Multiverse in search of a way to stop the Incursions. I don't think he is even on Earth-616 around the time of this story, let alone able to be there for his untimely demise. I could definitely be wrong about this timing, but that was my initial reaction to things when I first read it.

5 of 7 people found the following review helpful. So Close To Being A Classic By Sam Rick Remender is my favorite writer at Marvel. His characters are so human. They make mistakes and it makes them relatable and their victories mean more. Even Axis, which was universally hated by every reviewer, was kind of awesome for me. This story, which has ties to other Remender works(the team is his Uncanny Avengers plus Wasp, Thor, and Hank Pym. The Descendants from Secret Avengers and a Stark Sentinel from Axis make appearances.) worked on a lot of levels.For the life of me, I couldn't tell which artist was doing which pages. I'm sure people more familiar with both Pepe Larraz and Jerome Openas work might, but either way, it makes for cohesive storytelling. Both artists did great, with several highlights committed to my memory, especially that panel with Vision and Planet Ultron in the background.Which brings me back to Remender. After turning Stark into a sociopath with insane levels of insecurity and fear, Rick decides to turn Hank Pym, no one's favorite Avenger (didn't he beat his wife at one point? Also... Ultron!) into another damaged individual. Which brings me to my first criticism. I just finished this book 30 minutes ago and I can't remember what was wrong with him. I love the dynamic between Pym and Ultron and Vision (Pym is through messing with robots), probably my favorite part of the book is a flashback to Ultrons birth (second criticism, everyone talks. A lot. All the time.) It's all very Shakespearian, which is good. But at the same time, this whole story was written like it was trying to prove something about Ultron and Pym. And I'm just not sure it accomplished it. Spoilers and all that, but Ultron is is a manifestation of Spoilers spoiler? Just meh. And we never see how the rest of the world was at the end. Or where Planet Ultron went.In conclusion, great book, needs an extra ten pages to be a true must read. Strong recommendation though.

See all 42 customer reviews... Avengers: Rage of Ultron, by Rick Remender


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Sabtu, 13 Juli 2013

The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Boo

The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

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The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark



The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

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Looking for a great quote to use at a wedding ceremony, to encourage a friend or for a love letter or card for Valentines Day? It might be in The Great Big Love Quote Book: “Forgiveness does not mean condoning or agreeing with a horrendous act. It is a decision to no longer attack one’s self. Forgiveness is, quite simply, the decision not to suffer. To forgive is to make the decision to be happy, to let go of judgments, to stop hurting others and ourselves, and to stop recycling anger and fear.” - Gerald Jampolsky - “A healthy relationship is one in which each person is free to be honest with the other, in loving ways. In a healthy relationship, each person’s needs are respected.” - Doreen Virtue - “Learn the art of patience. Apply discipline to your thoughts when they become anxious over the outcome of a goal. Impatience breeds anxiety, fear, discouragement and failure. Patience creates confidence, decisiveness, and a rational outlook, which eventually leads to success.” - Brian Adams - These are just some of the quotes you will discover in 'The Great Big Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More!' Cameron M. Clark will be the first to tell you he is no 'master' at Love, but rather an ever-learning student on the subject. In fact, he does mention this fact in the Preface to 'The Great Big Love Quote Book.' On the heels of publishing Book 1 of 'The Great Big Quote Book' series, Clark has drawn from his collection of thousands of inspirational quotes he's kept over the years and organized them into over 60 categories related to that mysterious thing called 'Love.' However, as he will be first to tell you, Clark thought a book of over 401 quotes on just the subject of Love might be too repetitive, uninspired and a little boring. That's why he broke up the text and organized it into different categories that he felt applied to the different areas of how Love is applied to strangers, our family members and others with whom we associate on a daily basis. His hope when starting the project was that the reader would feel as though they were reading a story about Love and all of her attributes rather than just a book with a bunch of quotes shoved together randomly. In 'The Great Big Love Quote Book,' you'll find words of Wisdom related to Communication, Compassion, Forgiveness, Honesty, Loss, Self Control, Sincerity, Trust and of course, Love. This makes the book an easily searchable tome for preparing for speeches, talks, wedding & anniversary toasts or just inspiring a friend who is going through a difficult time. In accordance to the quality standards set by Paul St. George Press, Clark was required to choose quotes of substance that actually instructed and/or inspired the reader. This led to the deletion of many sources originally included in the text, because the quotes didn't really offer much to the conversation about Love. Along with that stringent requirement, Clark was also required to research the credibility of his sources. The last thing he or his publisher wanted to do was include quotations from men and women who either had vapid, superficial advice or lived lives that seemed to contradict said advice. While nobody is perfect, most of the men and women quoted in the following volume lived lives of some accomplishment, some virtue, had something important to say, or all of the above. In a book of more than 401 quotes, Clark was able to draw on the words of famous women and men as Mother Teresa, Francis Bacon, Maya Angelou, Dr. Martin Luther King, Dr. Phil McGraw, Brian Tracy and Atul Gawande. Lesser-known, but people with just as important things to say about the subject include Doreen Virtue, M. Scott Peck, Gerald Jampolsky and George MacDonald. Of course, ancient philosophers and teachers such as Confucius, the Buddha, Cicero and others were not left out. Enjoy!

The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #742984 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-03-17
  • Released on: 2015-03-17
  • Format: Kindle eBook
The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark


The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Wide Variety! By Julia I found this book very appropriate to give as gifts. In fact, I have several teachers who will be receiving this book because I feel anyone in the service field would be able to appreciate the quotes offered in this book.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five Stars By C. J. Archinuk So many wonderful quotes and easy to read a little every day! Positive and uplifting!

See all 2 customer reviews... The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark


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The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark

The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark
The Great Big Love Quote Book: Over 401 Inspirational Quotes on Happiness, Forgiveness, Relationships & More! (The Great Big Quote Books Book 2), by Cameron M. Clark