EBOOK

About
The candid memoir of a young doctor who reluctantly accepts a military commission and spends a year behind the front lines of the Vietnam War Assigned to the marine camp at Phu Bai, Dr. John A. Parrish confronted all manner of medical trauma, quickly shedding the naïveté of a new medical intern. With this memoir, he crafts a haunting, humane portrait of one man's agonizing confrontation with war. With a wife and two children awaiting his return home, the young physician lives through the most turbulent and formative year of his life-and finds himself molded into a true doctor by the raw tragedy of the battlefield. His endless work is punctuated only by the arrival of the next helicopter bearing more casualties, and the stark announcements: "12 litter-borne wounded, 20 ambulatory wounded, and 5 dead."
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Reviews
"Intimate searing details of a year in the hell of Vietnam . . . brutally frank."
The Boston Globe
"An autobiographical M*A*S*H* . . . phenomenal."
Library Journal
"The author gives us not just the wisdom and expertise of a physician, but the firsthand testimony of a man who understands that wars don't end when the last shot is fired. Wars go on and on in human memory."
Library Journal