Introduction
Part I: Edging Toward Calamity: Vietnam in the Early 1960s
Chapter 1: Coming into a Troubled Land
Chapter 2: Latter-Day Mandarins: The Ngo Family
Chapter 3: A Strange Alliance: The Americans and Diem
Part II: The War in the Delta
Chapter 4: In the Field with the ARVN
Chapter 5: Finding an Elusive Foe
Chapter 6: Disaster: The Battle of Ap Bac
Chapter 7: Collapse in the Delta
Part III: The Fall of the Diem Regime
Chapter 8: The Buddhist Revolt Begins
Chapter 9: The Raid on the Pagodas
Chapter 10: A Slow Change in American Policy
Chapter 11: The Saigon Press Controversy
Chapter 12: The Final Days of Ngo Dinh Diem
Chapter 13: What Should Be Done in Vietnam?
Epilogue: Return to Vietnam
David Halberstam (1934–2007) was the author of 20 books, the last 14 of which have been national best-sellers. His most recent book, The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War, is about the Chinese entry into the Korean War. He was the winner of the Pulitzer Prize for his reporting in Vietnam and was a member of the elective Society of American Historians.
For all the legions of books published on the Vietnam War, none
surpasses one of the earliest and most prescient—David Halberstam's
The Making of a Quagmire. Halberstam's shrewd observations of the
complexities of Vietnamese politics and the obstacles the U.S.
faced early in achieving its goals deeply inform the entire book. A
brilliant study that has lost none of its power despite the history
that unfolded after its publication, Halberstam's book deserves to
be read again and again.
*Ellen Fitzpatrick, Carpenter Professor of History, University of
New Hampshire*
Few journalists did more to educate Americans about the harsh
realities of the Vietnam war than David Halberstam. The Making of a
Quagmire offers numerous insights into the conflict between the
American press and the U.S. government that began in those years
and ultimately played a major role in the war. The book is a
valuable introduction to Vietnam in the era of John F. Kennedy and
Ngo Dinh Diem.
*George C. Herring, University of Kentucky*
As it did in 1965, Halberstam's book will provoke vigorous
discussion. Readers will marvel at how the United States allowed
itself to be so misled in South Vietnam and will use the book to
make connections to more recent events in the Middle East.
*Robert Dallek*
Halberstam's wartime work will last not just because of its quality
and its importance but because it established a new mode of
journalism, one with which Americans are now so familiar that it's
difficult to remember that someone had to invent it.
*The New Yorker*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |