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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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THE ODYSSEY OF ECHO COMPANY

Doug Stanton

The 1968 Tet Offensive and the Epic Battle of Echo Company to Survive the Vietnam War

From the New York Times bestselling author of In Harm’s Way and Horse Soldiers comes a harrowing and redemptive account of an American army platoon fighting for survival during the Vietnam War.
Odyssey is about twelve young men surviving sixty days on the run from the enemy during the Tet Offensive in 1968, at the height of the Vietnam War. Under trained, ill-prepared, naïve, and patriotic, this band of brothers forms a recon platoon of the 101st Airborne Division. The Tet Offensive, launched by the North Vietnamese Army, was the turningpoint in the decade long war, a national watershed moment. The fighting was hand to hand, non-stop, and waged in endless small battles that forged this group into a life-long brotherhood of survivors.

On a single night, January 31, 1968, some 100,000 NVA soldiers attacked 36 cities throughout South Vietnam, hoping to topple that government and dislodge American forces. The suddenness and scale of the attack resulted in a political victory back in the US, that led to, among other things, LBJ’s decision not to run for re-election. The boys of the recon platoon, average age 19, are from small farms, California beach towns, and big cities like Chicago, and they are cast into a war they neither understand, nor, ultimately, feel they can win. Winning, then, becomes simply a matter of survival, of keeping the man on your left and right alive. Each young man lived a 100 years in these days, and came home to a country that did not understand, nor wanted to understand, what they had survived.

They came home winners for having survived; but were losers for having fought there. When they came home, they landed in San Francisco and took off their uniforms, and walked back into America, where they fell silent and realized that not many wanted to hear the remarkable story they had to tell—until now.


Doug Stanton lives in his hometown of Traverse City, Michigan, and has worked as a creative writing and English teacher at the undergraduate and graduate college level, and at Interlochen Arts Academy in Michigan as writer-in-residence. He has traveled extensively as a contributing editor for Esquire, Men’s Journal, and Outside magazines, writing travel, adventure, and political pieces. He is a founder of the high-profile Traverse City Film Festival, an annual celebration of cinema, and the increasingly well known National Writers Series. With his contacts in the Department of Defense, Pentagon, and various branches of the U.S. military, Stanton is a subject matter expert in the areas of insurgency, counter-insurgency, and unconventional and civil wars.
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Book

Published 2017-09-19 by Scribner

Book

Published 2017-09-19 by Scribner

Comments

Doug Stanton, one of our most artful practitioners of literary non-fiction, has long had a knack for finding stories that put a human face on war. Here is raw combat captured in all its pathos, exhilaration, terror, and sense of brotherhood. Novelistic in detail and compulsively readable, Stanton's searing tale of war and homecoming will soon find its place on a rarefied shelf alongside Matterhorn, A Bright Shining Lie, The Things They Carried, and We Were Soldiers Once . . . And Young—which is to say, among the classics of the Vietnam War.

From harrowing scenes of battle to those of heart-rending tenderness, I felt I’d joined the young paratroopers of Echo Company in their journey through the Tet Offensive of 1968. Doug Stanton writes about the personal for the millions. It’s an amazing story of a group of young men who lived history.

Doug Stanton is a superb nonfiction writer who grabs you and holds you from first page to last. Readers who follow him on this Odyssey through Vietnam and the American psyche will never forget it.

Although the characters in Doug Stanton's newest book are ordinary Americans from unexceptional backgrounds, "Odyssey" is the right word to describe their harrowing experiences in the Vietnam War. There was a Homeric quality in their battle to survive the Tet Offensive, as well as in their homecoming, when they found themselves strangers in their own land. In this tale of men at war, Stanton once again proves himself to be both a superb journalist and a master storyteller.

The history of the Vietnam War hovers over America’s conscience like a ghost, haunting those who took part in it, challenging those who try to find meaning and possibly redemption in it. The individual histories of the men and women who fought in that brutal, ugly conflict are painful. Gathered in this book are the stories of a few soldiers in one reconnaissance platoon in one company who were in the worst of the fighting in 1967-68. Doug Stanton has captured the horror, the tragedy, the extreme courage and devoted brotherhood of these men in exceptional and sensitive detail. They are not stories for the faint-hearted. But they are emotionally rewarding for a reader to experience.

The Odyssey of Echo Company is a majestic, masterful book. I couldn’t put it down, even in its most aching, tearful moments. War has such a dark heart, and Doug Stanton doesn’t shy away from that, but he also shows us the better hearts of human beings, and that’s what makes this book so profoundly moving and unforgettable.

No one in the world does this kind of thing better than Doug Stanton. He's a meticulous reporter, a fluent, propulsive storyteller, and this account of tragedy and triumph is an instant go-to text for those who want to know what their fathers and brothers—and America—were doing fifty years ago.

Doug Stanton has done it again. In The Odyssey of Echo Company we go to war in Vietnam, up close and personal with patriotic young, working class Americans who take us through their daily lives of brutal, face to face combat and how it changed them forever. This is a book for all Americans to read for the enduring lessons of what happens when we commit our precious young to the ravages of combat. It is a civic duty to read The Odyssey of Echo Company.