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Bury Him

A Memoir of the Viet Nam War

Captain Doug Chamberlain

$34.95   $31.67

Paperback

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English
Love the West Publications LLC
16 March 2023
"Bury Him: A Memoir of the Viet Nam War offers readers a first-person account of what life was really like for Marine infantry units during this formative time of American and Vietnamese history.

""A combat veteran's astute look at the Vietnam War, both captivating and emotionally forthcoming."" - Kirkus Reviews

Ordered to take command of a company of Marines, Capt. Doug Chamberlain endured many challenges. One challenge was a direct order to bury the remains of a Marine that had been left behind by another unit and be forced to participate in the following cover-up. The order was in direct contraction of United States Marine Corps Policy and the Warrior's Honor Code of never leaving any Marine behind. Following this order meant committing an act of incomprehensible betrayal and dishonor.

In this captivating new book, Capt. Chamberlain explains in detail the events that transpired as he was forced into playing the role of a political pawn in a massive wartime cover-up. Capt. Chamberlain expertly paints a picture of deceit and military malfeasance, sharing with the reader the moral and mental struggles that ate away at him in the decades that followed this horrible act."

By:  
Imprint:   Love the West Publications LLC
Edition:   2nd ed.
Dimensions:   Height: 254mm,  Width: 178mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   508g
ISBN:   9781957077246
ISBN 10:   1957077247
Pages:   290
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for Bury Him: A Memoir of the Viet Nam War

Captain Doug Chamberlain's book reaffirms the stark reality, daily agonies and the constant vigilance of commanding a company of Marines and Corpsmen in combat during the height of the Vietnam War in 1968. It is both story and history describing threatening events with split-second decisions changing lives, forever! This book is a compelling read, honest, up-close and personal told by a Company Commander who took his responsibilities seriously! Skipper Chamberlain, not only tells the rest of the story but tells the real story of his time in the field with his Marines and Sailors and of the traumatic, life-changing ordeal of being ordered by higher-ups to bury a U.S. Marine KIA.... -Grady T. Birdsong, Corporal USMC - 1/27, 2/9 & 3rd MarDiv Communications Company, RVN 1968-1969. Author of To the Sound of the Guns. I have known Doug Chamberlain to be a man of constant character and integrity since I first met him as a student athlete at John Brown University in the 1960s. His book recounts his agonized response to a direct order to bury the remains of a fallen Marine in Vietnam, followed by a prompt retraction at Doug's urging and a heroic recovery and return of that body to the family. However, the confusing and critical response from a few officers in the Marine Corp Command set Doug upon a difficult 50-year journey of unanswered questions and great personal stress. His final victorious discovery of the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth is a gripping and tough personal narrative that will inspire every reader in difficult circumstances to speak truth, regardless of the consequences. -John E. Brown, III Past president of JBU, and former AR State Senator Captain Chamberlain's searing memoir of combat in the southern I Corps zone, during the height of the Vietnam War, not only tells gripping stories of heroism and tragedy... it also unveils, for the first time, the truth of a sorry episode in Marine Corps history that has remained buried for fifty years. Chamberlain's earnest prose reveals a burdened conscience, but it also demonstrates his unflinching courage in fulfilling his duty as a Marine and a patriot, ultimately proving himself a warrior with his honor intact. I was privileged to help him uncover documentary evidence of the events at the heart of his story, bringing closure after half a century for a company of Marines who were asked to do the unthinkable, and for a family who never understood why they had to bury a loved one--not once, but twice. Bury Him can stand proudly alongside such enduring classics of Marine Corps literature as Robert Leckie's Helmet for My Pillow and Philip Caputo's A Rumor of War. -Paul T. Semones, P.E., Semones Forensic Engineering


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