Contents
[hidetoc]All of the following resources are available in the University Library; see the call number by each title to locate it in the library collections.
NONFICTION
The 25-Year War; America's Military Role in Vietnam by Bruce Palmer
(Library Call Number- DS558.P337 1990)
Across the Mekong: The True Story of an Air America Helicopter Pilot by Charles O. Davis
(Library Call Number - DS558.6.L3 D38 1996)
After Tet: The Bloodiest Year in Vietnam by
Ronald H. Spector
(Library Call Number - DS558 .S69 1994)
America's Longest War: The United States and Vietnam, 1950-1975 by
George C. Herring
(Library Call Number - DS558 .H45)
American Daughter Gone to War: On the Front Lines with an Army Nurse in Vietnam by
Winnie Smith
(Library Call Number - DS559.44.S57 1992)
American Power and the New Mandarins by
Noam Chomsky
(Library Call Number - E744 .C514)
Anatomy of an Undeclared War; Congressional Conference on the Pentagon Papers
(Library Call Number - E183.8.V5 A83)
Argument Without End: In Search of Answers to the Vietnam Tragedy by Robert S. McNamara
(Library Call Number- DS558 .M439 1999)
A book arising out of two discussion groups held in Hanoi, this is an unprecedented look at a war from the policy makers on both sides, Vietnamese and American, written by the first Secretary of Defense to run our efforts in Vietnam. McNamara himself is plainly shocked by the misinterpretations and false impressions each side used to determine the course of America’s longest war. The book leads the reader to conclude that wars are often caused and continued as much by cultural ignorance and suspicion as by any other reasons.
The Army and Vietnam by Andrew F. Krepinevich
(Library Call Number - DS558 .K74 1988)
At War with Asia by
Noam Chomsky
(Library Call Number - DS557.A63 C47 1970)
Authors Take Sides on Vietnam by Cecil Woolf
(Library Call Number - DS557.A68 W6 1967b)
Backfire: A History of How American Culture Led Us into Vietnam and Made Us Fight the Way We Did by Loren Baritz (Library Call Number - DS558.B37 1986)
"Baritz reminds us of how confident we were in America's invincibility during those pre-Vietnam War days. He looks closely into 'the invention of South Vietnam' during the Kennedy years, and he examines the body counting war at home--the bureaucratic and psychological effort to convince ourselves that we were winning, and would surely win. Backfire reveals brilliantly why the lessons of Vietnam are so difficult to learn," -- Martin J. Sherwin, History Book Club
The Best and the Brightest by David Halberstam
(Library Call Number- E841 .H25 1988)
John McCain said, “…anyone who feels a need, as a confused former prisoner of war once felt the need, for insights into how a great and good nation can lose a war and see its worthy purposes and principles destroyed by self-delusion can do no better than to read and reread David Halberstam’s The Best and the Brightest."
The Betrayal by William R. Corson
(Library Call Number - DS557.A6 C6 1968)
Lieutenant-Colonel Corson was in charge of the “Pacification” teams of Americans who tried to promote economic self-sufficiency. Although Corson thought the teams were succeeding, he felt their goals were being sabotaged by inept, short-sighted American policy and the arrogant and totalitarian South Vietnamese government. Focusing on the people themselves—the peasants, merchants, villagers and soldiers—Corson’s book provides an eye-opening look at the struggle for “hearts and minds.”
A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam by Neil Sheehan
(Library Call Number - DS558.S47 1988)
John Paul Vann, a Korean War veteran, was one of the first American advisers in Vietnam in the 50’s. Originally a staunch believer in the war, Vann grew appalled at corruption within the South Vietnamese government and military, as well disgusted with the brutality and unwillingness to fight of the common South Vietnamese soldier. At odds with his superiors, who could not or would not recognize the problems of our allies, Vann finally took matters into his own hands and made his feelings public in a 1963 press conference that appeared to poleax his career. Nevertheless, he endured in Vietnam, leading the successful defense of Kontum before dying in a helicopter crash in 1972. Some regard Vann as a true American hero, with all his shortcomings and flaws. His analysis of the war appears in retrospect to have been prophetic.
Fire in the Lake; The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam by Frances FitzGerald
(Library Call Number - DS557.A6 F53)
Fitzgerald won several book awards, including the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award, for his study of Vietnam through the eyes of the Vietnamese. Showing the conflicts between the corrupt cities and countryside, Buddhist and Catholic, Communist and anti-Communists Fire in the Lake explains in great detail how the Americans got it so wrong in Vietnam. To illustrate but one example: when 80% of the country worships their ancestors and their ancestral ground, what is the effect of razing their villages and moving them miles away to relocation camps, to keep them out of contact with the Communists?
The Hill Fights: The First Battle of Khe Sanh by Edward F. Murphy
(Library Call Number - DS557.8.K5 M87 2003)
Murphy tells the story of the battles around Khe Sanh that led up to a four-month siege of the base in January-April 1968.Over 600 Marines and Navy corpsmen gave their lives in brutal jungle warfare, filled with great heroism, cowardice, and incompetence. There were no shortage of acts of bravery, and surely no greater frustration than that of the fighting men issued the new M-16 rifle, which often failed them at the most critical moments. One of the best views of what it was like to fight in Nam.
Papers on the War by Daniel Ellsberg
(Library Call Number - E183.8.V5 E4)
The Pentagon Papers; the Defense Department History of United States Decisionmaking on Vietnam
(Library Call Number- E183.8.V5 P42)
Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg
(Library Call Number- DS558 .E44 2002)
The Village by Bing West
(Library Call Number-DS557.A69W513 2003
When first published in 1972, West’s book disappeared in the anti-war sentiment of its time. Some newspapers and magazines refused to even review it. Nevertheless, after 35 years, it is evident that West wrote one of the essential stories of the actual day-to-day fighting which occurred in Vietnam, Republic of. His history of a 15-member squad of Marines and their small cadre of Vietnamese People’s Forces attempting to wrest control of a group of villages from the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese regulars is a classic description of small unit action. More than that, though, West gives the reader a feel for the intricacies of what was essentially a civil war, with neighbors on opposing sides and their families often caught in between. Few books capture the personal complexities of the Vietnam conflict the way this does.
We Were Soldiers Once and Young: Ia Drang, the battle that changed the war in Vietnam by Harold G. Moore
(Library Call Number-DS557.8.I18M66 1992)
In November 1965, some 450 men of the 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry, under the command of Lt. Col. Hal Moore, were dropped by helicopter into a small clearing in the Ia Drang Valley. They were immediately surrounded by 2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers. Three days later, only two and a half miles away, a sister battalion was chopped to pieces. Together, these actions at the landing zones X-Ray and Albany constituted one of the most savage and significant battles of the Vietnam War.
How these men persevered--sacrificed themselves for their comrades and never gave up--makes a vivid portrait of war at its most inspiring and devastating. General Moore and Joseph Galloway, the only journalist on the ground throughout the fighting, have interviewed hundreds of men who fought there, including the North Vietnamese commanders. This devastating account rises above the specific ordeal it chronicles to present a picture of men facing the ultimate challenge, dealing with it in ways they would have found unimaginable only a few hours earlier. It reveals to us, as rarely before, man's most heroic and horrendous endeavor--Publisher's description.
(NOTE: See also the video below of the same name)
MEMOIRS/ORAL HISTORIES/PERSONAL ACCOUNTS
The Bad War: An Oral History of the Vietnam War by Kim Willenson
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .W55x 1987)
Between Two Fires, the Unheard Voices of Vietnam
(Library Call Number - DS557.A69 B43)
The people of Vietnam—the civilians—were most often the ones who paid the price of combat. Here are nine of their stories, too often lost in the sounds of battle. A needed viewpoint.
Beyond Survival: Building on the Hard Times--a POW's Inspiring Story by Gerald Coffee
(Library Call Number - DS559.4 .C63 1990)
Bloods, an Oral History of the Vietnam War
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .B56 1984)
While the war in Vietnam was raging, another war at home was straining the fabric of American society. The civil rights struggle in the United States reached boiling point with the assassination of Martin Luther King in 1968 and the targeting of the Black Panther Party by the nation’s police. At the same time, although African Americans represented only 14% of the eligible enlistees, 22% of the armed forces at the time were African American. In the Army, 25% of the ranks were “bloods.” Increasing militarism in the civil rights struggle came with these recruits and volunteers to Vietnam and was responsible for a profound change in the way servicemen saw the war and interacted with their fellow soldiers. In this context, Bloods, the memoirs of twenty black servicemen who served in the war in Indochina, presents complex and thought-provoking viewpoints of what it meant to be black and in-coutnry.
The Cat from Hue: A Vietnam War Story by John Laurence
(Library Call Number - DS557.7 .L376 2002)
The Circle of Hanh: A Memoir by Bruce Weigl
(Library Call Number - PS3573.E3835 Z464 2000)
Decent Interval: An Insider's Account of Saigon's Indecent End by Frank Snepp
(Library Call Number - DS558 .S58)
Dispatches by Michael Herr
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .H47 1997)
Correspondent Michael Herr compiles bits and pieces of journalism, poetry and conversation, to give the reader a stark and consuming vision of what the Vietnam experience was like for the men in the field. Example: “Every day people were dying there because of some small detail they couldn’t be bothered to observe. Imagine being too tired to snap a flak jacket closed, too tired too clean your rifle, too tired to guard a light, too tired to observe the half-inch margins of safety that moving through the war often demanded, just too tired…and then dying behind that exhaustion.” One of the best memoirs of the war.
Everything We Had: An Oral History of the Vietnam War
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .E88)
If I Die in a Combat Zone; Box Me Up and Ship Me Home by Tim O'Brien
(Library Call Number - DS557.A69 O27)
This could be considered the third leg of the O-Brien trilogy of Vietnam. Both the short stories of The Things They Carried and the fictional Going after Cacciattto contain elements of imaginative narrative, but this is the author giving us his story. "O'Brien paints an unvarnished portrait of the infantry soldier's life that is at once mundane and terrifying--the endless days of patrolling punctuated by firefights that end as suddenly and inconclusively as they begin; the mind-numbing brutality of burned villages and trampled rice patties; the terror of tunnels, minefields, and the ever-present threat of death. Powerful as these scenes are, perhaps the most memorable chapter in the book concerns his decision to desert just a few weeks before he was sent to Vietnam. "The AWOL bag was ready to go, but I wasn't.... I burned the letters to my family. I read the others and burned them, too. It was over. I simply couldn't bring myself to flee. Family, the home town, friends, history, tradition, fear, confusion, exile: I could not run." Tim O'Brien went into the war opposing it and came out knowing exactly why. If I Die in a Combat Zone is more than just a memoir of a disastrous war; it is also a meditation on heroism and cowardice, on the mutability of truth and morality in a war zone and, most of all, on the simple, human capacity to endure the unendurable." --Alix Wilber, (taken from the Amazon.com description )
Legacy of Discord: Voices of the Vietnam War Era by Gilbert Dorland
(Library Call Number - DS558 .D63 2001)
On Point: A Rifleman's Year in the Boonies: Vietnam, 1967-1968 by Roger S. Hayes
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .H395 2000)
Patriots: The Vietnam War Remembered from All Sides by Christian G. Appy
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .A66 2003)
A Rumor of War by Philip Caputo
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .C36)
'Compelling . . . A thoroughly honest view of what the experience of Vietnam meant to a young college graduate, a 'gung-ho' lieutenant in the marine corps who enlisted for the 'heroic experience' of war . . . It is the most eloquent statement yet on what Vietnam was for the lower echelons who had to do the dirty work.' -- Seattle Times
Soldier Talk: The Vietnam War in Oral Narrative
(Library Call Number - DS557.7 .S648 2004)
Strong at the Broken Places: A Personal Story by Max Cleland
(Library Call Number - RD796.C57 A37)
The Unwanted: A Memoir by Kien Nguyen
(Library Call Number - E184.V53 N36 2001)
Voices from Vietnam by State Historical Society of Wisconsin
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .V65 1996)
Voices of the Vietnam POWs: Witnesses to Their Fight by Craig Howes
(Library Call Number - DS559.4 .H68 1993)
Walking the Rez Road by Jim Northrup
(Library Call Number - PS3564.O765 W3 1993)
We Won't Go; Personal Accounts of War Objectors by Alice Lynd
(Library Call Number - DS557.A68 L9)
When Heaven and Earth Changed Places: A Vietnamese Woman's Journey from War to Peace by Le Ly Hayslip
(Library Call Number - DS556.93.H39 A3 1990)
Year in Nam: A Native American Soldier's Story by Leroy TeCube
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .T43 1999)
FICTION
The 13th Valley by James Del Vecchio
(Library Call Number - ON ORDER)
A novel of the 101st Airborne as they traverse the Khe Ta Laou Valley. The author uses the “cherry” new guy in the platoon and follows him through his tour, as he gains experience in battle and loses his softness. Some have noted the dialogues and discussions in this book seem too intellectual, but Del Vecchio himself noted that many of the GIs and Marines in Nam had at least some college—they were, at the time and on the whole, the best-educated soldiery the United States had ever fielded. The battles and the banalities of camp life ring true and their lives and emotions are open and honest. A great book about the war.
A Dangerous Friend by Ward S. Just
(Library Call Number - PS3560.U75 D36 1999)
A look at the Vietnam of 1963, when ideologues abounded in Vietnam, trying to further democratic ideals and keep the country away from the Communist sphere of influence. Just's allegory of unbridled idealism shows how nation-building and spreading democracy, without ever understanding the country or the people in it, can turn the most compassionate and naively idealistic people into "dangerous friends."
Don't Mean Nothing: Short Stories of Vietnam by Susan O'Neill
(Library Call Number - Browsing Area - PS3615.N45 D66 2004)
The war in Vietnam from a woman’s point of view, and a nurse in a surgical hospital unit at that, Don’t Mean Nothing is a series of inter-related stories, with the personnel of the unit showing up as the main characters in one story and secondary characters in others. Taken as a whole, the book offers much of what The Things They Carried does—only from a unique point of view. O’Neill served as a surgical nurse in two hospitals during the war and her stories are funny, tragic and poignant.
Dream Baby by Bruce McAllister
(Library Call Number - PS3563.A232 D74 1989)
Fields of Fire by James E. Webb
(Library Call Number - ON ORDER)
Arguably the best fiction book written on the Vietnam War, Fields of Fire tells the story of the war from the point of view of the platoon in the field. These are the men, primarily from the working-class, blue collar neighborhoods and the ghettoes of the inner-cities, who fought the war, took the casualties and dealt with the insanity wrought by the policy-makers. It is also the story of true valor and heroism, and hints at what it is about America that produces so many valorous and heroic young men and women.
The Fifth Book of Peace by Maxine Hong Kingston
(Library Call Number - PS3561.I52 F44 2003)
Finding Moon by Tony Hillerman
(Library Call Number - PS3558.I45 F47 1995)
From Sand Creek by Simon J. Ortiz
(Library Call Number - PS3565.R77 S36 2000)
Going After Cacciato by Tim O'Brien
(Library Call Number - PS3565.B75 G64x 1975)
Where The Things They Carried are short stories on a common theme, and If I Die in a Combat Zone is non-fiction, personal narrative and memoir, this book by O’Brien is by turns comedic, absurd, hallucinatory, savage and brutal. It is the story of a soldier who’s had enough and deserts his post, with the idea he will attempt to jump-start the peace talks by walking 8,000 miles from Vietnam to Paris. His buddies in the squad go after him, and end up in the far corners of the world: Europe, Mandalay, New Delhi, and Tehran. The narrator, in the meantime, intersperses recollections of childhood, with his experiences in Vietnam, their first lieutenant and an unfortunate night on outpost duty. Surely one of the most surreal books about Vietnam, written or published.
The Green Berets by Robin Moore
(Library Call Number - PS3563.O644 G7 1983)
This 1965 novel was credited with illuminating for the first time America’s new, unconventional fighting force. Fighting the Viet Cong and allied with the Montagnards of Vietnam’s highlands, the Green Berets opposed the Communists in Vietnam by focusing on the people of the country and what was good for them, as much as by destroying the enemy. Because of this, they often had to struggle simultaneously with conventional American forces and commanders, who dismissed their tactics and war with the judgment they’d “gone native
The Healer's War by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
(Library Call Number - PS3569.C324 H42x 1989)
Hocus Pocus by Kurt Vonnegut
(Library Call Number - PS3572.O5 H6 1990)
Ray by Barry Hannah
(Library Call Number - PS3558.A476 R3 1994)
VIDEORECORDINGS
FICTIONApocalypse Now [Videorecording (VHS)]
(Library Call Number - DS557.73 .A66x 1992)
and
Apocalypse Now Redux [DVD]
(Library Call Number - PN1995.9.W3 A66x 2001)
Francis Ford Coppolla’s melding of Vietnam and the Conrad novel Heart of Darkness. The journey upriver is one of the more surrealistic and tense experiences in movie history. A young Martin Sheen stars as Captrain Willard, an Army Captain, trained as an assassin, who is assigned to find and terminate a renegade Special Forces Colonel named Kurtz, who has formed his own private army in the Cambodian jungle. Among the many memorable scenes are the Wagnerian Air Cavalry raid on an enemy village, and the dialog-filled USO show that quickly turns into a riot. Probably the most stylistic and impressionistic movie of Vietnam.
Coming Home [VHS]
(Library Call Number - PN1995.9.W3 C66 2002)
Jon Voight and Jane Fonda both won Academy Awards for their roles in this movie. Voight plays a paralyzed veteran, recovering from his injuries in a VA hospital, when Fonda, who went to the same high school, discovers him there. Bruce Dern, as Fonda’s husband, an Army captain currently serving in Vietnam, also gives an exceptional performance.
Full Metal Jacket [VHS]
(Library Call Number - PN1995.9.W3 F86x 2001)
Seldom has boot camp training been starker or more intensely filmed. Vincent D’Onofrio’s intense portrayal of the slower boot Pyle and real-life Drill Instructor R. Lee Ermey as Sgt. Hartman carry the first half of the film—the second half battle of Hue seems almost anti-climactic. Yet taken as a whole, Kubrick’s film is a stark before-and-after detailing what it means to be a Marine.
Hamburger Hill [DVD]
(Library Call Number - Ds557.73.H35 1987)
Most believe Hamburger Hill is a treasure of a war movie, not as big budget as Platoon or Full Metal Jacket, but ultimately packing more of a punch. Actors who were virtually unknown when the movie was made make the narrative highly believable. Join a company of the 101st Airborne as they pick up their replacements, share a little R and R, then attempt to take a hill from the NVA in a long, gruesome ten-day battle. The understated view of the movie allows the audience to take their own lessons away from the film.
In Country [VHS]
(Library Call Number - DS557.73 .I63x 1989)
Bruce Willis stars as an eccentric uncle, trying to help his niece understand her father, a casualty in Vietnam.
Platoon [Videorecording]
(Library Call Number - ON ORDER)
Based on Oliver Stone’s own tour of duty, Platoon is an allegorical tale of good and evil, sometimes over the top, though filled with much that was apparently true about serving in Vietnam. Ultimately, whether you are (or were) a hawk or a dove on the war will determine how you feel about this movie. The IMDB (Internet Movie Database) has many comments that this is the best war movie ever made. Judge for yourself.
We Were Soldiers Once [DVD]
(Library Call Number - DS557.73.W4 2002)
Starring Mel Gibson as Colonel Hal Moore, whose 7th Cavalry Battalion is dropped into a major North Vietnamese staging area and fights for three days, this is a moving, apolitical account of the human and horrible costs of battle.
DOCUMENTARIES
Battle for Dien Bien Phu [DVD]
(Library Call Number - DS553.3.D5 B37 2005 )
A must see for anyone who wants to understand how the United States got into a conflict in Vietnam--and how the military, in trying to avoid the mistakes of the French, often found themselves making different errors.
Bombies [VHS]
(Library Call Number - DS555.8 .B66x 2001)
"Between 1964 and 1973 the United States conducted a secret air war, dropping over 2 million tons of bombs and making tiny Laos the most heavily bombed country in history. Millions of these cluster bombs did not explode when dropped, leaving the country massively contaminated with "bombies" as dangerous now as when they fell a quarter century ago. Bombies examines the problem of unexploded cluster bombs through the personal experiences of a group of Laotians and foreigners and argues for their elimination as a weapon of war." -Producer's description
Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam [VHS]
(Library Call Number - DS559.5 .D43x 1987)
A history of the war using actual letters written by those serving, music from the period, and both newsreel footage and home movies made by the soldiers and Marines themselves, Dear America iallows the viewer remarkable insight into the conflict.
How Far Home: Veterans After Vietnam [VHS]
(Library Call Number - DS558 .H68x)
Produced by Northern LIghts Video in Boston, How Far Home explores the psychological effects and adjustments of the Vietnam veteran. Filmed in 1983, it provides a mile marker for veterans from our current war.
Making Sense of the Sixties [VHS]
(Library Call Number - HN59 .M34x 1991)
A documentary that looks at the entire cultural upheaval in America which occurred of which the Vietnam War was a single catalyst.
Ordinary Americans: The Vietnam War [VHS]
(Library Call Number - DS558 .O74x 1997)
A filme that focuses on the contrasts and similarities of the war in the jungles of Vietnam and the war at home. Told by those who participated in the fighting overseas and the protests and policy-making at home.
Regret to Inform [VHS]
(Library Call Number - DS559.8.W6 R45x 1998)
Director Barbara Sonnenberg's husband was killed in Vietnam and her film chronicles her pilgrimage to that country to see where he died. As she interviews both Vietnamese and Americans, she illuminates the true costs of war.
Sir, No Sir [DVD]
(Library Call Number - DS559.62.U6 S57 2006
Those who protested American involvement in Vietnam were not solely counterculture "freaks'--men and women both in the military and recently discharged also came out against the war, often facing long prison sentences to do so. This story of military protest touches all the social conflicts present at that time.
They Were Young and Brave [Videorecording]
(Library Call Number - DS557.I3 T54x 1994)
An ABC documentary about the Battle of Ia Drang—11 survivors of the battle returned to the battleground after almost 30 years and share their memories of this epic battle. A complementary film for the fictional video on the same battle, We Were soldiers Once, described above.
The Turbulent End to a Tragic War: America's Final Hours in Vietnam [Videorecording]
(Library Call Number - DS559.916 .T97x 1989)
Two Days in October [DVD]
(Library Call Number - DS558 .T86 2005)
A documentary that chronicles two key events in the Vietnam war—a deadly ambush by the Vietcong of an American battalion of the 101st infantry that killed or wounded over 120 soldiers, and an antiwar protest in Madison, Wisconsin against Dow Chemical Company (the maker of napalm), that began nonviolently and ended with the city police smashing into a campus building and beating and arresting the protestors. The film stands as a clear look at the vast gulf--political and socio-economic--caused by the war in Vietnam. Also quite interesting for its Wisconsin roots.
Vietnam: A Television History [Videorecording]
(Library Call Number - DS558 .V64x)
The War at Home [Videorecording]
(Library Call Number - DS559.62.U6 W37 1979)
POETRY
The Cry of Vietnam; Poetry by Hanh Nhat
(Library Call Number - PL4378.9 .N55
From Both Sides Now:The Poetry of the Vietnam War and Its Aftermath
(Library Call Number - PN6110.V53 F76 1998)
Out of the Vietnam Vortex; A Study of Poets and Poetry Against the War by James F. Mersmann
(Library Call Number - PS309.P7 M4)
Poems from Captured Documents
(Library Call Number - PL4378.65.E5 P64 1994)
Raiding a Whorehouse by Michael Casey
(Library Call Number - PS3553.A7934 R35 2004)
Radical Visions: Poetry by Vietnam Veterans compiled by Vicente F. Gotera
(Library Call Number - PS310.V54 G67 1994)
Where is Vietnam? American Poets Respond; an Anthology of Contemporary Poems by Walter Lowenfels
(Library Call Number - DS557.A61 L6)
Winning Hearts & Minds: War Poems by Vietnam Veterans compiled by Larry Rottmann
(Library Call Number - PS591.V4 R6 1972)
PHOTOGRAPHY AND ART
A Different War: Vietnam in Art by Lucy R. Lippard
(Library Call Number - N6512.L57 1990)
In Opposition; Images of American Dissent in the Sixties by Benedict J. Fernanadez
(Library Call Number - E839 .F4 OVERSIZED. Shleved on bottom shelf)
Requiem: by the Photographers Who Died in Vietnam and Indochina compiled by Horst Faas
(Library Call Number - DS557.72 .F33 1997)
Vietnam Sketchbook; Drawings from Delta to DMZ by Charles H. Waterhouse
(Library Call Number - DS557.A61 W3)
THE WAR AT HOME
Campus Wars: The Peace Movement at American State Universities in the Vietnam Era by Kenneth J. Heineman
(Library Call Number - DS559.62.U6 H45 1994)
Chance and Circumstance: The Draft, the War, and the Vietnam Generation by Lawrence M. Baskir
(Library Call Number - DS559.8.D7 B37 1978)
Assault on the Left: The FBI and the Sixties Antiwar Movement by James Kirkpatrick Davis
(Library Call Number - DS559.62.U6 D38 1997)
Crises of the Republic; Lying in Politics, Civil Disobedience on Violence, Thoughts on Politics, and Revolution by Hannah Arendt
(Library Call Number - JC491 .A67)
Culture Clash by Ellen Matthews
(Library Call Number - E184.V53 M37x 1982)
Fighting on Two Fronts: African Americans and the Vietnam War by James E. Westheider
(Library Call Number - DS559.8.B55 W47 1997)
The War Within: America's Battle Over Vietnam by Tom Wells
(Library Call Number - DS559.6.W45 1994)
Regret to Inform You: Experiences of Families Who Lost a Family Member in Vietnam by Norman E. Berg
(Library Call Number - DS559.8.M5 B47 1999)
The Wounded Generation: America after Vietnam
(Library Call Number - DS558 .W68)
Berkeley at War, the 1960s by W. J. Rorabaugh
(Library Call Number - F869.B5 R67 1989)
The Strength Not to Fight: An Oral History of Conscientious Objectors of the Vietnam War by James W. Tollefson
(Library Call Number - DS559.8.C63 T65 1993)
Last Updated: 08/28/2007 and Last Revised: 6/7/07
Contact Ask a Librarian 715-232-1353 for more information or help on this topic.

