MWSA Review
Bill Sheehan’s Together We Served is a gut-wrenching collection of stories from Navy corpsmen who served with Marines on the ground in Vietnam.
Every Marine feels a bond with every other Marine, and most have little fondness for the Navy, but there is one member of every Marine platoon that is loved and protected like no other—the one they call Doc. Navy corpsmen have served with Marines in combat for many years. Seldom older than the Marines they serve, they are nevertheless looked up to, because every Marine knows that if they get hit, Doc will come for them or die trying.
The stories in this book are real-life accounts of exactly that: Navy corpsmen doing everything they can to serve, protect, and save their Marines. That idea is repeated over and over again in this book: my Marines, our Marines, etc. They are touching always, terror-filled sometimes, and often without a happy ending. But they are real, and from the heart. The author, a Vietnam combat corpsman himself, collected these stories from those he served with, having reconnected with them through social media. He also tells his own story, and then shares one final story from a modern-day corpsman severely wounded while carrying on the corpsman tradition in Iraq. This particular corpsman removed his own wounded finger because it was preventing him from adequately treating his wounded Marine. There is no better illustration of the bond between Marines and corpsmen.
Vietnam veterans, prior hospital corpsmen, and army combat medics will appreciate this book very much. Well done to the author and those that contributed.
Review by Rob Ballister (January 2023)
Author's Synopsis
Fellow combat Navy Corpsmen talk about their experiences when they served with their Marines, in the jungles of Vietnam in 1968-1969. Sometimes difficult to talk about, but always heart wrenching, these stories are true and a reminder of the consequences of a war that has initiated PTS, various cancers and emotional trauma that they still battle.
Format(s) for review: Paper and Kindle
Review Genre: Other—Anthology
Number of Pages: 170
Word Count: 37,000