Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The 13th Valley by John M. Del Vecchio. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages. This compelling
book is a novel about the Vietnam war as experienced through the
eyes of James Chelini. Engagingly realistic in content, this
novel not only mesmerizes the reader immediately, but makes the
horrors of this cataclysmic war only too real. John M. Del
Vecchio, the author, has written a horrifying and realistic
portrayal of the way it really was in Vietnam. Bibliography
lists 1 source.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JGA13THV.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
only mesmerizes the reader immediately, but makes the horrors of this cataclysmic war only too real. John M. Del Vecchio, the author, has written a horrifying and realistic portrayal
of the way it really was in Vietnam. THE 13TH VALLEY James Chelini, a telephone-systems installer finds himself an infantryman in Vietcong-controlled territory surrounded by the fierce and cruel
North Vietnamese army. Chelini, once a pacifist, spirals downward into the depths of despair and desperation as the reader sees him changing before their eyes. This novel, considered
one of the best ever written about the brutalities of the Vietnam war, shows just one soldiers change of heart as he is subjected to the atrocities of war. The
13th Valley is considered one of the wars classics. It is based on an actual operation, code-named Texas Star, that took place in 1970-71. However, while all the events
recounted in the book did not actually occur during Texas Star, they are real. "St. Martins Press has reprinted the book," Del Vecchio says, "and one of the things I
did was write a new forward. It explains why I wrote the book and what I was thinking while I was writing it. At that time I was trying
to set the record straight. There were stories coming out claiming how bad American troops were in Vietnam. This infuriated me. I wrote about my unit, the
101st Airborne Division, and how well it did." "The notion persists that there was a lot of drug use, atrocities were commonplace, and there was a lack of discipline."
Nothing could be further from the truth. Were there incidents such as these, you bet. All wars produce such incidents. A good book that has just been
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