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On The Ho Chi Minh Trail – The Blood Road, The Women Who Defended It, The Legacy Tapa blanda – 3 octubre 2023
Offering both a personal and historical exploration of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, this book highlights the critical role the Trail and the young women soldiers who helped build and defend it played in the Vietnam War. Accompanied by two traveling companions, Sherry Buchanan winds her way from Hanoi in the north to Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, in the south. Driving through the spectacular scenery of Vietnam and Laos, she encounters locations from the Truong Son mountains, the Phong Nha Caves, ancient citadels, and Confucian temples to the Khmer Temple of Wat Phu at the western-most point of the Trail in Laos.
Buchanan records her interactions―both scheduled and spontaneous―with those who experienced the Vietnam War firsthand. She listens to the women who defended the Trail roads against the greatest bombing campaign in modern times, walks through minefields with the demolition teams hunting for unexploded ordnance, and meets American veterans who have returned to Vietnam with an urge to “do something.” Buchanan weaves informative, and often humorous, tales from her journey with excerpts from the accounts of others, situating the locations she visits in their historical and political context. On the Ho Chi Minh Trail brings together geography, history, and personal accounts to reveal the scale of the tragedy, its harmful legacies, and our memory of it. Buchanan challenges American exceptionalism and calls for redress for those harmed by US military actions during the Vietnam War and America’s subsequent wars.
- Longitud de impresión280 páginas
- IdiomaInglés
- EditorialAsia Ink
- Fecha de publicación3 octubre 2023
- Dimensiones13.97 x 2.79 x 21.59 cm
- ISBN-101916346324
- ISBN-13978-1916346321
Descripción del producto
Críticas
"Buchanan’s interview style gives the women space to tell their own stories in their own words, reviving their youthful energy and dedication. . . . Also included are photographs that capture Vietnam’s beauty and contrasts―of mountain ranges swathed in blue mists that hide steep, death-dealing ravines; of a tank abandoned fifty years ago that rusts at the edge of a rice field. On the Ho Chi Minh Trail is a satisfying cultural history with insights into Vietnam and the women who fought for it." ― Foreword Reviews
"Intrigued to know more about the War from female perspectives, [Buchanan's] book is guided by interviews with former female soldiers who contributed to the building of the trail or fought in the war against the US Army. . . . The book is conveniently structured in chapters, as each marks a point in her journey from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City. In each city or place, she meets the female soldiers whose contribution to the war still has not been sufficiently appreciated and adequately honored in Vietnam. These are women balancing ammunition boxes on their shoulders, who fought side by side with their male counterparts, and who still remain traumatized by the horrors of the war they experienced first hand." ― Asian Review of Books
"The Ho Chi Minh Trail was the quasi-mythical network of roads, paths and tunnels that North Vietnam used, in its war against South Vietnam and the Americans, to transport military supplies to its supporters in the South, the Viet Cong. On the Ho Chi Minh Trail is a travelogue, charting American journalist, author and publisher Sherry Buchanan’s trip down the trail in 2014, collecting the stories of the young women who played a vital role in keeping the trail open despite the constant American bombing. The book includes pictures of Vietnamese war art, maps and an itinerary (in case you want to follow in her footsteps!) and brings all of the author’s knowledge of Vietnam to bear." ― Five Books
"Combining travelogue, history, interviews, art, and 'endless empathy', this reveals the hidden history of the women who defended the Ho Chi Minh Trail against the most ferocious bombardment in modern times, during the Vietnam War." ― The Bookseller
"Buchanan tells the powerful story of the women who defended the Ho Chi Minh Trail, a network of roads and trails used by the North Vietnamese to supply their troops, defeat the Americans and their South Vietnamese allies, and unify the country. A journalist, expert on Vietnamese art and an historian, Buchanan has deep insight and understanding that flows through this historical reminiscence and travelogue. . . . Buchanan’s voice is lyrical. . . . By grounding her modern meditations on the Trail in an historic context, Buchanan has contributed to that process of gradual, person-by-person, healing and reconciliation." -- Ted Osius, former US Ambassador to Vietnam ― tedosius.com
“I look forward to giving a copy of On the Ho Chi Minh Trail to my father, who served in the Navy in Da Nang. I have no doubt that it would offer him―and all of the book’s readers―an illuminating, creative, and revelatory view of this conflict that continues to haunt the American psyche.” -- Erin Hogan, author of Spiral Jetta
“This is a fascinating account of the largely untold story of the courageous women who played a strategic role for the North by safeguarding the major supply route from North Vietnam to the combatants waging the war in the South. Buchannan provides new insights into the long conflict by illuminating the critical contributions of women who not only undertook a very dangerous mission in an extremely harsh environment, but also became a powerful force for reconciliation at the war’s end. We get to travel the Ho Chi Minh Trail with the author, becoming present-day witnesses to the compelling history of women who defended the Blood Road decades ago.” -- Melanne Verveer, former US Ambassador for Global Women’s Issues
"Buchanan takes us to a beautiful and haunted land where hundreds of thousands of young women and men risked their lives in a staggering effort to forge a route to national unification against the greatest military power on earth. Combining travelogue, history, interviews, art, and endless empathy, On The Ho Chi Minh Trail is a compelling meditation on the relationship between past and present, war and peace, memory and reconciliation." -- Christian G. Appy, professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and author of American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity
"Buchanan takes us on the Ho Chi Minh Trail in a riveting and as relevant a journey today as it was fifty years ago. She charts new territory―-especially in the vivid, often heartbreaking stories of women who fought in the war as teenagers and the forced roles of housewives who stood on rooftops to shoot down U S planes that bombed their homes. Buchanan details―at times too much to absorb―the countless centuries of Vietnam's perilous path to freedom. But her vibrant writing and crystal clear interviews with women―their youthful dreams and present day realities―shine a powerful light on a war and a previously unexplored dimension that should never be forgotten." -- Myra McPherson, author of Long Time Passing: Vietnam and the Haunted Generation
"A riveting read of a hidden history. Buchanan reveals the untold story of the young women in Vietnamese war drawings who patriotically defended the Ho Chi Minh Trail during the American–Vietnam War (1965–1975). This book is essential reading for anyone wishing to understand Asian history from new perspectives." -- Jessica Harrison-Hall, curator, British Museum
"I have two vastly different, but enduring memories of the Ho Chi Minh trail. Firstly, as an Air Force fighter pilot bombing the trail, and 31 years later, as the first post-war U.S. ambassador to Vietnam frequently travelling along its length while engaging in bilateral diplomacy. Consequently, in reading Sherry Buchanan’s meticulously researched, stimulating and beautifully written On the Ho Chi Minh Trail, I felt like I was on the journey with her. The book is an exceptional travel log; the reader gets a superb geography lesson; a narrowly focused history of the trail during the war; and an introduction into Vietnam’s unique artistic and cultural identity including a primer on some of its exceptional cuisine. But above all, the author’s trip companion’s commentary and the heart-wrenching stories of the people (especially the women) they met along the way are what makes this book an absolute gem. Their remarkable stories of survival and sacrifice along with their remembrance of the hundreds of thousands who did not survive along the Trail will keep readers spell bound.” -- Pete Peterson, first postwar US ambassador to Vietnam and Vietnam War Veteran
"In On the Ho Chi Minh Trail: The Blood Road, the Women Who Defended It, the Legacy, journalist Sherry Buchanan adds another chapter to the conflict’s story by recording the War’s events from the perspective of the women who fought on its frontlines." ― Scheer Intelligence Podcast
Biografía del autor
Detalles del producto
- Editorial : Asia Ink (3 octubre 2023)
- Idioma : Inglés
- Tapa blanda : 280 páginas
- ISBN-10 : 1916346324
- ISBN-13 : 978-1916346321
- Peso del producto : 505 g
- Dimensiones : 13.97 x 2.79 x 21.59 cm
- Opiniones de los clientes:
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The frustration is in the writing style - a kind of journalistic approach that is maddening at times. I would even call this lazy writing, except that it appears to be a style that is more prevalent today. But I think it borders on poor writing and the failure to find an editor who thinks about the reader. The main flaws are the author's inability to cull the fluff - or perhaps it is a tendency to inflate the importance of mundane, useless information - which appears also to be a stylistic choice.
This snippet of conversation on p 42
"Please. Start. I gather you are interested in what life was like on the Trail," Kim Chi said, by way of encouragement.
"Yes, I am."
or, on p 36: "I unfolded the paper map that had been my companion during the months I was preparing for the trip. I had been a map-lover since my schooldays; I drew distant lands, mountains, roads, and waterways that held the promise of adventure. Institutional walls had inspired my desire in adulthood for freedom and discovery. A sense of over-belonging to one place created bigotry. Torn at the folds, it looked like a vintage map even though I was its only owner."
So, who is this story about? The author seems to want us to know every time she is led up some steps or talking in a coffee shop and so on - in short, one might suspect she is the center of the story.
And that's frustrating. I suppose this style of writing works in a newspaper story - the New York Times' feature pieces show less and less editing as well - why do the work of creating a text that focuses on what matters - let the reader sift through the banalities for the pieces of gold. I know the feeling - when writing my dissertation, I used many hours of interviews with people who had engaged in intense and risky acts of protest. I wanted to "let them tell the story." Fortunately, the more hard nosed woman who advised me insisted that I paraphrase and limit the quotes to what really mattered - such as the significance of ghosts and spirits and the problem of not being able to account for the many bodies - heartbreaking, to use a cliche.
And that may be the difference. Journalists are a different breed of writer than scholars - perhaps they are supposed to be a big part of the story - that we are supposed to feel like we are joining them on the journey. But in this case, the author needed a more critical editor and a little more discipline and focus on her subject than on her role. A whole book of journalistic self-indulgence is a little long.
In fairness, if you like to know that the guy walked into the room wearing a wool scarf to ward of the brief Hanoi winter, you may enjoy the writing style.
Regardless - if you care very much about Vietnam today and also honoring the struggle of Vietnamese people in the war, this book should be on your shelf. Anyone who teachers courses specifically on Vietnam or on imperialism and the post colonial world also needs to read this.