MWSA Review
Larry Duthie has given us a vivid and deeply moving account of his war in Vietnam and his personal journey to reconcile with it in Return to Saigon: A Memoir. Skillfully weaving together humor, raw honesty, sincere love for his brothers-in-arms, and painstaking attention to detail, Duthie paints a clear coming-of-age tale of his transformation from a high school student into a naval aviator, and eventually into a combat veteran seeking healing. Duthie’s memoir is outstanding and should be required reading for all those who are interested in the Vietnam War and in learning more about military conflict from a warrior’s perspective.
Review by Zita Ballinger Fletcher (March 2022)
Author's Synopsis
The author of this memoir ejects from his burning Navy jet onto a karst ridge near Hanoi, and what follows is one of the most implausible and heroic rescues of the Vietnam air war. The events immediately following his rescue carry him to a secret base in Laos and then to a makeshift hospital in Saigon. The larger story, however, is of a man's complex relationship with Vietnam.
It begins in Saigon, where as a teenager he attends high school and comes to love the Vietnamese people. When he returns to the States for college, he believes he's done with the country. But as a Navy pilot, it's a direct line back to Vietnam where he will fly 137 combat missions.
After he leaves the Navy, Vietnam tightens its grip. Three decades later, he climbs the ridge where he and his flight leader were shot down. He learns his guide's brother was one of the gunners--then she leads him deep into a cave. Later that day, seated at a table in her thatched home, he begins to find reconciliation.
ISBN/ASIN: 9798680692028, 9780578800288, 9780578760957, ASIN B08HRC1J79
Book Format(s): Hard cover, Soft cover, Kindle
Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography
Number of Pages: 308