
Photo credit: Janet Donovan
“There were all sorts of great writers in Vietnam, but I want to introduce you to [photographic artist] Dorothy Fall who wrote the brilliant biography of Bernard Fall – a French journalist who was killed in Vietnam and who wrote these brilliant books about these people without joy,” said journalist Myra MacPherson at a joint authors party at her home. Bernard’s book, Street without Joy, was originally published in 1961 before the United States escalated its involvement in South Vietnam and was required reading for policymakers. It is now considered a classic. Myra’s own book, Long Time Passing: Vietnam and the Haunted Generation is also a classic and is required reading in most universities.
On This Day in History, December 30th, 1970, the U.S. Navy transferred some responsibility to the South Vietnamese as part of President Nixon’s Vietnamization program so US troops could be withdrawn. The Vietnam War was the longest in American history and the most unpopular.

Don Blackburn
“He covered the war in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia for the AP and has written a book about a helicopter commander and his crew,” said MacPherson when introducing The Price They Paid: Enduring Wounds Of War. “We were talking about the survivor guilt feeling that so many veterans feel.” She also acknowledged the authors of The People Make the Peace who as young adults in the 1960s and 1970s along with nine others worked to end the U.S. war in Vietnam.
