- Paperback: 220 pages
- Publisher: McFarland & Company (Dec 19 2007)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0786437537
- ISBN-13: 978-0786437535
- Product Dimensions: 2.3 x 1.5 x 0.1 cm
- Shipping Weight: 318 g
| |||||||||||||||
Product Details
|
Tag this product(What's this?)Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items. |
|
There are no customer reviews yet on Amazon.ca
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
She has succeeded in assembling their recollections into a coherent and dramatic account of the emergency evacuation of the villagers in May 1975. The US-sponsored airlift represented the final act in a secret struggle conducted in Laos by the CIA during the Vietnam War.
At the center of the story is the charismatic General Vang Pao, the military and societal leader of the Hmong people, who risked assassination in a final futile effort to make it possible for his people to remain in their homeland. Also compelling is Jerry Daniels, the tough, loyal, resourceful director of the CIA's Hmong operations.
But some of the most moving accounts in this collection are those of average people thrust into extraordinary circumstances: a woman gives birth in a cramped airplane flying over the Mekong, a long-time soldier watches helplessly as three of his children are suddenly killed by friendly fire, a student returns from college to find his family home abandoned and ransacked.
The villagers' accounts capture in plain language the trauma and sadness of a proud people who must reluctantly accept defeat and banishment from their own land at the hands of the Pathet Lao communist forces.
A poignant account of a people whose dignity and sheer will to survive allowed them to endure an unimaginably painful challenge. Highly recommended.
In reading these devastatingly real, simple, compelling and complete tales, the whole scene in Laos emerges in your mind and heart: beleaguered general Vang Pao, Air America pilots, Jerry Daniels, the CIA liaison to the general, Hmong students; fifty or so key people's dozens of interviews are layered to recreate the time scale and sense of the events. Complete with photographs, flight logs, glossary and excellent index, this compact and well constructed book will engross and enlighten any reader, as well as history buffs and scholars.
Finally, a haunting pair of photos -- top secret Long Tien in 1973, and another one, as mysterious as ever, from exactly the same angle and height (about 1000 feet above the runway), in 1995.
A compact, tightly-woven and compelling tale.