Review of
Survivor
Love Thy Enemy, by James Dennison ISBN 9781477478158
Five out of five stars
While the
execution of the Vietnam War was complicated, at the basic level it was very
simple. The people of Vietnam had been under the control of foreign powers for
centuries, from their traditional rival China to the French and in the last
years, the Americans. At the end of World War II when the Japanese forces in
Indochina had to be disarmed, Ho Chi Minh openly preferred the French return
rather than have the Chinese forces move in from the north. The Vietnamese
desire to expel the agents of foreign powers was simply a nationalistic urge to
take complete control of their country. It was naive and foolish of the French
and then the Americans to think otherwise, which led to what was essentially a
colonial war on the part of the American forces.
This story is
told from three sides in the conflict. The first is that of an American foot
soldier from Chicago that was drafted into the military at the age of 20 and
then sent to fight in Vietnam. His unit slogged through the mud, fighting a
nebulous, yet deadly enemy that appeared, killed and injured some of their unit
and then disappeared. It did not take long before the American soldier
understood that the strongest sentiment in Vietnam was for the foreigners to
leave. He realized that the South Vietnamese government was totally corrupt and
had little popular support.
The second side
is that of a committed member (Van) of the Viet Cong, totally ruthless in his
actions, willing to brutally kill anyone that he felt acted contrary to his
goals. The third side is that of the Vietnamese that were apolitical or
uncertain as to their allegiance, with the main character being the female
Tuyen. She operates as a communist agent due to her love for Van, yet his iron
commitment to the communist cause leads her away and eventually into the arms
of the American soldier.
Therefore, this
story is a combination of the background of the conflict in Vietnam with a
literary traditional love triangle with two men and one woman. That plot thread
is the weakest part of the story. What gives it the strength is the background
regarding the war, for the American soldier learns very quickly that the
Americans can never win the war. The weakness of the South Vietnamese
government in combination with the strong desire of the Vietnamese for
independence from foreign domination meant that eventually the communists would
win. He understood that it was impossible to kill enough of the Vietnamese to
make them surrender to the American presence.
Written by an
American veteran of the war, this is a work of fiction with a great deal of
fact embedded within. The fact is much better than the fiction.
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