Facing My Lai
Moving Beyond the Massacre
Edited by David L. Anderson
New in Paperback: October 2000
xiv, 244 pages, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1057-0, $16.95
Also available in cloth
ISBN 978-0-7006-0864-5, $29.95
The My Lai massacre of March 16,
1968 and the court martial of Lt. William Calley a year and a
half later are among the bleakest episodes in American history
and continue to provide a volatile focus for debates about the
Vietnam War. Other books have exposed the facts surrounding the
incident; Facing My Lai now examines its haunting legacy
through a unique exchange of contemporary viewpoints.
This powerful book emerges from a stellar gathering of historians,
military professionals, writers, mental health experts, and Vietnamese
and American war veterans convened to memorialize the tragedy.
The cast of prominent speakers included journalists Seymour Hersh
and David Halberstam, novelist Tim O'Brien, psychiatrist Robert
Jay Lifton, military prosecutor William Eckhardt, and veterans
Hugh Thompson and Ron Ridenhour--the two true heroes in the My
Lai story. David Anderson's reflective recasting of their presentations
creates an impassioned chorus of voices that demonstrates why
this tragedy remains one of the key emblems of the American experience
in Vietnam.
These authors address many of the troubling questions that
still persist about My Lai. Why had it been identified as a Viet
Cong stronghold? What orders were the troops actually given?
Why didn't someone stop the slaughter? But these questions are
asked again in the hope that they might lead to a better understanding
of what My Lai means for us now.
As these authors show, our nation is still trying to come
to grips with the bitter legacies of the Vietnam War. A grim
window into the darker side of American history (like the massacre
at Wounded Knee), My Lai reminds us of humanity's baffling capacity
for attrocity within the crucible of war. Facing My Lai
does not allow us to forget or hide from such horrors, but it
also seeks to heal the deep wounds inflicted by the war. Its
unflinching look at the past ultimately leads us away from darkness
and towards a more enlightened understanding of a war that in
many ways is not over yet.
"A profound memorial to a dark, forgotten history. A
book of utmost importance."--Oliver Stone
"An all-encompassing, multidimensional examination of
the massacre by a distinguished group of historians, military
journalists, poets, and novelists."--Kirkus Reviews
"What is impressive about this excellent book is that
all sides of the arguments are presented. Readers will find it
hard to put down."--Vietnam
"An important and timely book."--Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"A crucial book filled with much passion and insight."--Indianapolis
Star
"This book makes it less possible for Americans to forget
and thus to repeat the mistakes that led to the tragedy in Vietnam."--Journal
of Military History
"The contributors have sincerely wrestled with the enormity
of My Lai and respect the views of those who have reached conclusions
different from their own. The result is a book that encourages
a similar thoughtfulness on the part of the reader. If I were
to suggest only one book to give officers and noncommissioned
officers interested in studying the lessons of the My Lai massacre,
this would be it."--Marine Corps Gazette
"However ghastly, however tragic, My Lai certainly bears
remembering as a cautionary story from Vietnam, both in what
caused this atrocity to happen and what the U.S. Army has done
to prevent future My Lais from happening."--Seattle
Post-Intelligencer
"A coherent volume of passionate reflections on the painful
subject of the My Lai massacre."--Marilyn B. Young,
author of The Vietnam Wars, 19451990
"I read this book with great interest and deep emotion.
I expect it will have a deeply cathartic effect on its readers.
The recollections of those who had a hand in uncovering My Lai's
horrible truth are gripping, and the discussion of post-traumatic
stress disorder adds a whole new dimension to the story."--Robert
D. Schulzinger, author of A Time for War
DAVID L. ANDERSON is professor of history at the University
of Indianapolis. His other books include The Human Tradition
in the Vietnam Era, Shadow on the White
House: Presidents and the Vietnam War, 1945-1975, and
Trapped by Success: The Eisenhower Administration and Vietnam,
19531961, winner of the Robert H. Ferrell Book Prize.
He served in Vietnam as a sergeant in the U.S. Army Signal Corps.
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