Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE ENSIGN LOCKER by J.J. Zerr

THE ENSIGN LOCKER

by J.J. Zerr

Pub Date: Aug. 12th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-955177-40-5
Publisher: Primix Publishing

A Vietnam War novel focuses on a United States Navy destroyer stationed off the Gulf of Tonkin.

It is January 1966, and Navy Ensign Jon Zachery has spent his first month aboard the USSManfredin San Diego, California, the vessel’s home port. He is the newbie in the “Ensign Locker,” the tiny quarters that house five shipmates. It has been rough going for the insecure enlistee, whom readers meet as he is waiting for his wife, Teresa, to give birth to their first child. Soon enough, the chaos and fear Jon feels during Teresa’s emergency C-section are replaced by the stress and excitement of his experiences at sea. After months of offshore training, the Manfred deploys to the South Pacific. The bulk of the narrative takes place over the next six months, during which Jon copes with the overwhelming assortment of Navy regulations and procedures, deals with his angst over being apart from Teresa, gets into trouble, and finally develops into a respected leader. His slow transformation begins in the Philippines, where he scores in a chiefs-versus-officers softball game—a small victory for the ensign whose propensity for seasickness has earned him the nickname Two Buckets. Arriving in Vietnam, the Manfred takes up a position north of the DMZ, providing support for the U.S. Marines fighting the Viet Cong in the jungle. It is here that the story picks up steam with vividly described action scenes, both in the water and on land. Zerr is a Vietnam veteran with a long naval career. A minimal internet perusal of the author will confirm what readers may quickly suspect—that the novel is semiautobiographical. The first clues are the accidental, sporadic slip-ups in which the third-person narrator uses a first-person pronoun (“ ‘Aa yes hole,’ Cowboy said as he followed us out the door”). In addition, there is Zerr’s encyclopedic knowledge of the minuscule details of life aboard a military vessel. Although moment-by-moment reporting of every turn of the screw, replete with naval terminology and acronyms, becomes occasionally mind-numbing, the author’s engrossing, atmospheric portrait of the period and place brings readers directly into the Vietnam conflict.

An engaging, evocative, and informative war tale that will especially appeal to Navy enthusiasts.