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NAVY SEALS

A HISTORY PART II, FROM VIETNAM TO DESERT STORM

An entertaining and informative volume that will appeal to general readers interested in military history or high adventure....

Interviews with Vietnam-era Navy SEALs about their elite training and demanding military service.

Drawing on interviews conducted by Bud Brutsman, veteran soldier and experienced military affairs author Dockery (The Teams, 1998) follows up Navy SEALs: A History of the Early Years (not reviewed) with this oral history of the teams’ harrowing combat duties in Vietnam. Loosely organized around the chronology of the conflict in Southeast Asia, the book at its heart is a tribute to the collective spirit exhibited here. Lieutenant Commander Scott R. Lyon introduces readers to the ad hoc nature of early SEAL training, which consisted of qualifying select groups of Navy personnel in any and every military skill that might be potentially useful in covert combat operations. Interviews with other early team members trace the evolution of SEAL training and its effectiveness under the stresses of combat in Vietnam. The same spirit that enabled him to survive Hell Week, Lieutenant Michael Thornton finds, also inspired him to swim his seriously wounded team members to safety during a botched combat insertion. Lieutenant Philip Martin reveals how unsuccessful search-and-rescues of American POWs often turned into important intelligence-gathering opportunities for alert SEALs. A commitment to teamwork and excellence echoes throughout, perhaps explaining how former SEALs from Senator Bob Kerry to Governor Jesse Ventura have continued to serve, lead, and inspire the nation long after they left the Navy. Dockery’s collection captures the SEAL teams’ can-do spirit.

An entertaining and informative volume that will appeal to general readers interested in military history or high adventure. (Maps and photos throughout)

Pub Date: Aug. 6, 2002

ISBN: 0-425-18348-3

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Berkley

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2002

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A COLONY IN A NATION

A timely and impassioned argument for social justice.

Profound contrasts in policing and incarceration reveal disparate Americas.

MSNBC host and editor at large of the Nation, Hayes (Twilight of the Elites: America After Meritocracy, 2013, etc.) expands the investigation of inequality begun in his previous book by focusing on law and order. Offering a persuasive analysis, he distinguishes between the Nation, inhabited by the “affluent, white, elite,” and the Colony, largely urban, poor, “overwhelmingly black and brown” but increasingly including working-class whites. The criminal justice system, argues Hayes, is vastly different for each: “One (the Nation) is the kind of policing regime you expect in a democracy; the other (the Colony) is the kind you expect in an occupied land.” In the Colony, “real democratic accountability is lacking and police behave like occupying soldiers in restive and dangerous territory.” Law enforcement, as noted by law professor Seth Stoughton, takes a “warrior worldview” in which “officers are locked in intermittent and unpredictable combat with unknown but highly lethal enemies.” Acknowledging that America has the highest rate of incarceration in the world, Hayes traces the country’s history of punishment to the experience of European settlers who, “outnumbered and afraid,” responded with violence. Between 1993 and 2014, although the crime rate declined significantly, most Americans feel that crime has increased and therefore support aggressive police action. Furthermore, although most crime occurs intraracially, the Nation believes that the Colony is a constant, insidious threat; unmistakably, “we have moved the object of our concern from crime to criminals, from acts to essences.” Among other rich democracies, ours is the only one with the death penalty. Whereas in Europe, humane treatment has been widely instituted, in the U.S., perpetrators are treated as unredeemable. “The American justice system is all about wrath and punishment,” the author asserts. Arguing for the erasure of borders between Nation and Colony, Hayes admits, regretfully, that such change might fundamentally alter the comfortable sense of order that he, and other members of the Nation, prizes.

A timely and impassioned argument for social justice.

Pub Date: March 21, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-393-25422-8

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Norton

Review Posted Online: Dec. 14, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2017

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THE WRIGHT BROTHERS

An educational and inspiring biography of seminal American innovators.

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A charmingly pared-down life of the “boys” that grounds their dream of flight in decent character and work ethic.

There is a quiet, stoical awe to the accomplishments of these two unprepossessing Ohio brothers in this fluently rendered, skillfully focused study by two-time Pulitzer Prize–winning and two-time National Book Award–winning historian McCullough (The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris, 2011, etc.). The author begins with a brief yet lively depiction of the Wright home dynamic: reeling from the death of their mother from tuberculosis in 1889, the three children at home, Wilbur, Orville, and Katharine, had to tend house, as their father, an itinerant preacher, was frequently absent. McCullough highlights the intellectual stimulation that fed these bookish, creative, close-knit siblings. Wilbur was the most gifted, yet his parents’ dreams of Yale fizzled after a hockey accident left the boy with a mangled jaw and broken teeth. The boys first exhibited their mechanical genius in their print shop and then in their bicycle shop, which allowed them the income and space upstairs for machine-shop invention. Dreams of flight were reawakened by reading accounts by Otto Lilienthal and other learned treatises and, specifically, watching how birds flew. Wilbur’s dogged writing to experts such as civil engineer Octave Chanute and the Smithsonian Institute provided advice and response, as others had long been preoccupied by controlled flight. Testing their first experimental glider took the Wrights over several seasons to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, to experiment with their “wing warping” methods. There, the strange, isolated locals marveled at these most “workingest boys,” and the brothers continually reworked and repaired at every step. McCullough marvels at their success despite a lack of college education, technical training, “friends in high places” or “financial backers”—they were just boys obsessed by a dream and determined to make it reality.

An educational and inspiring biography of seminal American innovators.

Pub Date: May 5, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-4767-2874-2

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: March 2, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2015

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