Posts by Doug Volk

Saying Thanks To Our Struggling Vietnam Vets With the Help of “Disabled American Veterans”

His name is Dennis Eggers, and he lost an eye to shrapnel fragments during a firefight in South Vietnam in 1968.

“They had us pinned down, and we retaliated with everything we had,” recalled Eggers, “from mortars to recoilless rifles to airstrikes.” Although doctors were able to remove the shrapnel that had entered his eye, an ensuing infection necessitated its removal.

Many years later, after struggling with PTSD-related nightmares for decades, the decorated Marine Corps infantryman got help from the Disabled American Veterans (DAV).
On this Memorial Day 2020, you can help disabled Vietnam veterans like Dennis Eggers toward continuing recovery from the brutal effects of war. To learn more about the DAV and the vets they serve: https://www.dav.org/learn-more/news/2020/walking-a-familiar-path/

»Posted by on May 14, 2020

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“A great work of terrifying horror and unrelenting suspense.”

https://vvabooks.wordpress.com/2019/12/14/the-morpheus-conspiracy-by-douglas-volk/

The Morpheus Conspiracy by Douglas Volk

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Douglas Volk’s novel, The Morpheus Conspiracy (DanJon Publications, 470 pp. $14.99, paper; $3.99, Kindle), is a great work of terrifying horror and unrelenting suspense. As I read it, I kept waiting to see if the story was going to fall apart. It never did.

The book begins with a mysterious incident that takes place in South Vietnam in late 1970. The story then moves to Atlanta and Boston during the months of the Watergate scandal.

After coming home, the main character David Collier literally wears his Vietnam War experience on his face. Massively disfigured in a fire during the war, he grows his hair long to conceal that part of his face, except for times when he chooses to reveal it. With an eye that never closes because the lid was burned away, he is reminded of what he went through every time he looks in a mirror. And he becomes driven by feelings of betrayal.

Collier believes he was betrayed by the Army, by his nation, and by his girlfriend who ended their relationship when he came home from Vietnam. Laura Resnick has her own reasons for splitting from him, but Collier is sure it’s because of what happened to his face.

Collier dreams about getting back at her, and it turns out that he seems to have the ability to cause her to have horrendous nightmares. And not just her, because he can also enter the dreams of other people he believes have offended him and bring harm to them.

Other characters include a VA doctor and a scientist with an interest in sleep disorders. They are ultimately brought together with Collier and Resnick in a story written in such a way that you can almost see and feel four solid walls closing in on them. Though much of the story takes place in a broad and wide dreamscape, it’s ultimately a very claustrophobic tale.

Frequently while reading. I found myself picturing the text in images like you would see in a graphic novel. I mean it as a compliment when I say this book would make a great graphic novel.

The Morpheus Conspiracy can be read on a few different levels: as entertainment, as psychological drama, and as an example—though greatly exaggerated—of what the Vietnam War did to the nation and to many of us who served in it.

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Douglas Volk

My favorite quote from the book is when Collier recalls a buddy who died in front of him: “He was history. He was the history of the Vietnam War.” What a great way to commemorate each death in that war. And those deaths are horror enough for this world.

This is a thrilling read and one of my favorite books of the year.

The author’s website is www.themorpheusseries.com

–Bill McCloud

Editor’s note: Douglas Volk, who served in the U.S. Army Reserves from 1970-76, is an life member of the Associates of Vietnam Veterans of America. He is donating one dollar from the sale of each book to VVA.

»Posted by on Dec 15, 2019

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Elderly Vietnam Vet Gets A “Hero’s Welcome” As He Enters Hospice Care in Small-Town Texas

He’s old and frail now, but he still has clear memories of his combat tour in Vietnam, nearly 50 years ago.
When Jerry Thompson returned to the U.S. after fighting in the Vietnam War, he was often criticized and even “spat on” by civilians who had grown weary of the long conflict.
But all of that changed dramatically the other day, when the aging Thompson was transferred from a Dallas VA hospital to hospice care in small-town Forney, Texas, his hometown.
In an outpouring of thanks and admiration, the townsfolk gathered near his home to cheer for the combat vet, with many shouting: “Thank you for your service, Jerry!”
To read this moving story about a Vietnam vet who got a hero’s welcome near the end of his life: https://www.inforney.com/lifestyle/a-hero-s-welcome-for-vietnam-veteran-returning-home-on/article_69de6fa8-f2b2-11e9-8ec3-9f2c4cce58ab.html

»Posted by on Oct 21, 2019

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THE BEST VIETNAM WAR BOOKS: A Reader’s Guide

It’s been nearly half a century since the shooting stopped in Vietnam (1973), and the legacy of that tragic conflict continues to inspire some of America’s best writers to create stories that mirror the profound events of 1965-1973.
Among the most provocative of the fiction and non-fiction books that have been written about the great Indochina conflict are Michael Herr’s hugely powerful journalistic descriptions of combat, Dispatches (1977) and Tim O’Brien’s collection of linked short stories, The Things They Carried (1990).
These are modern classics that explore both the horror and the shining courage of military conflict — and there are dozens of other books out there today that chronicle the events of that tumultuous era in American and Asian history.
To learn more about the stories that have been written about the war in recent decades, click on this link to a New York Times review of some of them: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/15/books/20-must-read-books-on-the-vietnam-war.html

»Posted by on Jun 13, 2019

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American Art and the Vietnam War: New Smithsonian Exhibit Captures Horror, Heartbreak of Turbulent Era

Horror. Heartbreak. Tragedy.
They’re all on stunning display—through August 18—at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, where an enormous exhibition of art created in response to the 1965-75 Vietnam War has been winning rave reviews since it opened in March.
Described by the nation’s famed art museum as “the most complete exhibition to examine the contemporary impact of the Vietnam war on American Art,” the new show includes nearly 100 works by 58 of the most accomplished artists of the turbulent Vietnam war era.
Among the deeply affecting art works on display are the “Bug-Shaped Bombers” created by acclaimed artist Nancy Spero; the controversial war-related drawings of painter Judith Bernstein, and Peter Saul’s wrenching masterpiece of 1967, “Saigon,” which shows how the war shattered human bodies and human hearts alike during that turbulent age of armed conflict. 
To learn more about this deeply disturbing and grief-provoking exhibition, just click on: 

https://americanart.si.edu/exhibitions/vietnam 

 

 

»Posted by on May 19, 2019

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