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I Came Home But It Wasnt Me The Memoirs Of A Vietnam Combat Veteran As A Recon Scout 1st Bruce Taneski

  • SKU: BELL-47445444
I Came Home But It Wasnt Me The Memoirs Of A Vietnam Combat Veteran As A Recon Scout 1st Bruce Taneski
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.0

26 reviews

I Came Home But It Wasnt Me The Memoirs Of A Vietnam Combat Veteran As A Recon Scout 1st Bruce Taneski instant download after payment.

Publisher: CreateSpace
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.05 MB
Pages: 338
Author: Bruce Taneski
ISBN: 9781508622963, 1508622965, B07PZX5NW5
Language: English
Year: 2015
Edition: 1st

Product desciption

I Came Home But It Wasnt Me The Memoirs Of A Vietnam Combat Veteran As A Recon Scout 1st Bruce Taneski by Bruce Taneski 9781508622963, 1508622965, B07PZX5NW5 instant download after payment.

Bruce Wm. Taneski’s memoir comes full circle when he sits on his pack and eats a can of C-Ration spaghetti and meatballs while looking down at one of the two NVA soldiers he had shot dead a few minutes earlier. “Don’t mean nothing,” he thought. However, deep down inside, he knew it did. Eight months earlier, as an FNG literally stained from head to foot with blood and guts, he had stared in disbelief at a door gunner who casually ate a can of peaches while his helicopter lifted off with the dismembered remains of men Taneski had helped put into body bags. Writing this book was part of Taneski’s treatment for PTSD, initially diagnosed in 1982. Along with his forty-five-year-old memories, he used after-action reports, maps, and letters he wrote home as source material. His subtitle spells out his wartime duties. Because his story is therapeutic, Taneski explains everything in detail, down to the nuts and bolts of his P-38 can opener. At times, he writes with the innocence of a young man seeing the world for the first time. He shares the teachings of his sergeants, which Taneski took to heart to succeed in Vietnam. Much of this true story describes, “many of the mundane missions we went on,” which involved “just humping through the jungle fighting the red ants, leeches and mosquitoes.” Taneski’s year peaked with two major operations. The first was the 199th’s final six-day sweep before returning to Fort Benning. The operation captured thirty-three NVA, while destroying an enemy hospital, training camp, and five hamlets. The second was a 5th Infantry Division engagement against a new NVA base camp near the DMZ, where Taneski finished his last month’s in country. Nevertheless, the book clearly tells who Bruce Taneski is and why, which is its purpose.—Henry ZeybelVietnam Veterans of AmericaBooks in Review II

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