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A History of the Ho Chi Minh Trail: The Road to Freedom Hardcover – Illustrated, Nov. 15 2006
- Print length196 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherOrchid Press
- Publication dateNov. 15 2006
- Dimensions18.11 x 1.88 x 25.1 cm
- ISBN-109745240761
- ISBN-13978-9745240766
Product details
- Publisher : Orchid Press (Nov. 15 2006)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 196 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9745240761
- ISBN-13 : 978-9745240766
- Item weight : 682 g
- Dimensions : 18.11 x 1.88 x 25.1 cm
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Virginia is an author, explorer and academic researcher specialising in military and political subjects as well as an organiser of the Ho Chi Minh Trail Challenge.
www.virginiamorris.co.uk
Virginia was born in London, where she gained a PhD in engineering. She later worked in Lao PDR for the United Nations and lived in remote regions of the country. Virginia came back to England in 1999 and became an engineering consultant and participated in both national and local politics. During this period she worked with Vietnamese and American war veterans to write her books, travelling to the countries to conduct research and carry out interviews.
@Virginialmorris
www.thehochiminhtrailchallenge.com
www.facebook.com/HCMTC
Customer reviews
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Top reviews
Top review from Canada
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Local councillor, Virginia Morris, and her husband Clive, are frequent visitors to South East Asia, having walked the Trail. They have a detailed local knowledge of what they have photographed and written about.
Actor Hugh Grant once said in the film `Notting Hill', about Turkey, when he was trying to sell a travel book: `it helps, as the author has actually being there'! Presumably that inspired Julia Roberts to buy the book on Turkey even if it was being sold by Hugh Grant! The same sentiment applies with `The Road to Freedom' which is authoritative, full of knowledge and detail, and yet sensitive to the intricate and virtually impossible sets of circumstances which have faced the people of South East Asia over the last fifty years.
I lived through the awful times described and remember them well. My cousin was killed during that war, as a serviceman, so I have a particular interest in what Morris and Hills have to say so many years after the events occurred. I have also served with many US personnel who fought in Vietnam.
The Ho Chi Minh Trail was a decisive factor in the defeat of US forces in the Vietnam War. At its peak, over 16 years, the Trail ran through North and South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. Despite massive bombing, American efforts failed to prevent essential goods reaching the North Vietnamese Army. What is so important about the book is the attention it pays to detailed research, the places photographed and visited, and the people interviewed. In its historic perspective, the book is an illuminating statement of the human cost of the war.
Morris & Hills were the first Westerners to traverse the entire length of the Trail. They have produced a balanced and fascinating account of what is a most remarkable feat of engineering and tactical warfare during the War. Morris describes the Trail "as one of North Vietnam's greatest military achievements". She recalls an interview with General Giap, who oversaw the construction of the Trail, by saying whilst they were "at opposite ends of the political spectrum" she looked forward to shaking hands with him because he was "the man who had the vision and intellect to see its construction through to the fall of Saigon." Indeed, it was a tremendous human achievement which won the war.
It is always difficult to view `achievements' such as the Trail without consideration of the human cost involved. 120,000 people worked on the Trail with over 20,000 dead and 30,000 seriously injured by chemical sprays and unexploded bombs. The problem for Westerners is that we really do not understand South East Asia. The Trail, like the Burma railway, was built on death and human misery but this was a logistics exercise to end all logistic exercises.
Pham Tien Duat wrote a war poem about Xieng Phan in 1963 which concludes on the immensity of the project:
"The sound of the slow drawing from water pipes,
The great sounds of trucks heading along the road,
In the battle zone,
The sound of bombing seems so small!"
A short review such as this cannot do justice to this scholarly and original work which is a worthy addition to the military historian's library, giving a fair and balanced account of a remarkable feat of engineering and tactical warfare mixed, as it is, with all the excitement of a travel book and haunted by the ghosts of those who created Ho Chi Minh's Trail.
Top reviews from other countries

Most accounts of the Trail relate it as a countless series of sub-trails and foot paths, but Virginia for the first time has documented from both North Vietnamese sources and personal experiences that it was a set of a little over twenty trails that followed well-established routes. The maps alone are worth buying the book.
Virginia's narrative includes a blow by blow of what it is like to travel the trail as it exists today as the jungle works to reclaim it. Her pictures along the trail which compare the before an after is also noteworthy.
If you are a scholar of the Vietnam War, you need to have this book as it has details about the organization and makeup of the trail that cannot be found in any other source. If you are a casual reader you will be surprised at the well thought out and interesting narrative. Pair it with John Prado's "Blood Road" which recounts many of the stories behind the trail and you will have an accurate picture of one, if not THE key battle of the Vietnam War.


