| |
In the evening of June
28, 1967, 150 young Americans were sworn into
the Marine Corps as part of the pre-game
ceremonies of a Minnesota Twins baseball game.
Before the end of the fourth inning these
volunteers were being hustled on to buses, on
their way to boot camp. It was a journey that
would take them from a boyhood of baseball in
the American heartland to manhood on the killing
fields of Vietnam. Christy Sauro was one of the
Twins Platoon, and in this book he tells what it
was like—from the pomp and ceremony of induction
to the all-too-real initiation by fire that
would shortly follow: in mere months, he and
most of the Twins Platoon were on the ground in
Vietnam and promptly faced with some of the
toughest fighting of the war, the Siege of Khe
Sanh and the Tet Offensive, including the brutal
Battle for Hue. From baseball to boot camp to
brutal combat, his is a firsthand story of
American life being lived at the limits—and
changed forever.
___________________________
|
|