I awoke in darkness, bringing up my Gus Grissom watch more for the tiny bit of illumination emanating out through the crystal than to see what time it was. I quickly oriented myself to where I was and how Iād come to be there. I heard the wind and river sounds wafting by the entrance to the cave. I breathed deeply in and out, gently sitting up and pulling away from Fusner, whoād apparently slept next to me unmoving through the night, or at least until five a.m., which it was. I remembered that Gunny said he was going downriver to pick up the remaining Kilo bodies just before dark the night before. I hadnāt heard anything since quieting Fusnerās crying and falling unconscious myself. I blinked my eyes rapidly. I felt vital, alive and so filled with an energy I wanted to get up and move about. I needed food and water, and I needed to get out of the cave. I hadnāt heard the CH-46 leaving or return, if it had returned. Iād heard nothing, and that fact was hard to believe since my nineteenth night had been the first Iād truly slept through since Iād been in Vietnam.
I almost whispered behind me to wake Stevens but then remembered he was dead. Zippo was there but I decided to let him sleep as long as possible, and Fusner too. The boy had shown me his age and how much he was holding inside himself. Why I had thought of him as a stoically tough figure I didnāt know, but I had. That he was just another young scared kid bothered me, although I knew it shouldnāt. My job, not his, entailed being the stoically tough figure, and I had to get better at playing that role.
Your great saga continues, James – what a riveting tale it is. I was prime cannon fodder age in 1969, but blessed with a high draft number. Your story along with the Ken Burns series sadly confirms everything I suspected of that era. I recall being at a hockey game in 1973 when they announced “the Vietnam War is over!” The crowd stood and applauded; I sat totally pissed because I knew what a huge lie it was.
btw, here is a link to lots of info about the A Shau in case you’re interested. All my best, Ed.
https://www.cc.gatech.edu/~tpilsch/AirOps/AShau.html
thanks for that Ed and the stuf fon the A Shau too….
Whom would have thought back then that that valley would become synomnymous with
such death and dismemberment…
Semper fi,
Jim
Hey LT, Junior could call up some Marine 4 duece mortars to overcome the cliff obstacles. There were two guns on hill 425. 1/11 W/Y battery.
Yes, the 4.2 mortars were a wonder when you needed high angle fire, and deadly accurate in the hands of those trained gunners.
Thanks for the imput and hilll 425 playes a role….and you must have been there to know…
Semper fi,
Jim
Dear Sir, Thank you for telling your story.
Back in the nineties there was a bunch of us that got together several times a year for a fishing trip up the mountains. One of the guys served in Vietnam, he never talked about it, I never asked. He found out my father was a Marine in Korea and we hit it off. One morning we were in the bar for breakfast, I asked a question about a TV show on Vietnam, I donāt know if it the numerous vodka and OJ he consumed for breakfast everyday or what, but I got the next half hour of his Vietnam experience in all itās gory detail. It was so chilling I could not believe it. Now your story confirms what he was telling me. He said he was in a unit referred to as the walking dead due to the casualty rate. He was there 68-69. He said he was in the A-Shaw valley and Dewey canyon.
Unfortunately he now resides in the mental ward of a VA hospital.
We need to know the truth. Thanks again for your efforts. God Bless.
Yes, the guys who made it back…didn’t really.
Most of us who came back were ‘repackaged’ by that valley like theGunny said earlier in my tour.
I didn’t come home as me. I look at those pictures of me in college and before.
I smile to myself. That kid had no clue…and that was good.
I have regained so much of my humor and positive outlook
on life itself but that kid, he had that in spades.
The A Shau gobbled him up in a matter of days…
Semper fi,
JIm
We all lose our innocence one way or the other and usually sooner then later. That is a lesson in life which we must learn, in order for us to be able to discern good from evil. Those of us who bare the burden of extreme evil, are and should be the teachers of those who are unaware of what evil truly is.
This is what you are teaching, when it comes to exposing the evils of war. War is never glorious in the sense that it kills and destroys our fellow human beings. The only glory that one might celebrate from war, is ending the evil perpetrated on mankind, by an aggressor nation. We will never see peace on earth, until we see the end of all wars and mankind adopts the idea of live and let live.
The truth, as written by J. Yes, on every point Mr. Wisdom….
Semper fi,
Jim
one of the most gratifing memories was when we brought everyone out of Kae-son,crewed h-53’s some really good times and some of the worst times
I remember when those guys all came out of there, against all odds. The French were not so lucky.
I did not know they all flew out on 53s thought. Great birds thos huge wonderful mothers.
Thanks for the comment and your own history…
Semper fi,
Jim
Jim…I’m no combat veteran. I just served and did what was asked of me. BUT..one line speaks all…”You got a gift and you are using it…just listen to them..”
If you don’t know it and haven’t realized it….You are what a leader is and should be…Our nation would be at a great loss without people like you….Thanks…
Thanks Charlie, I guess the role is a bit tougher to see fron the inside out.
Thanks for the compliment in your writing and putting it up on here in public.
Semper fi,
Jim
I look forward to each and every installment. I just wanted to say that the Gus Grissom references are pretty neat, as his birthplace is 9 miles from mine. He died a year before I was born, so I never got to meet the man, but he was definitely a hero to every child that grew up in Lawrence County, Indiana. Keep up the good work.
Yes, I love everything I have come to know about Gus. Needless to say, when I got home
I took to his memory and history as closely as I could when I came home and over the yeers.
Thanks for the comment.
Semper fi,
Jim
There were two types of ham and mother’s when I first went in. The original was ham and Lima beans and I loved em! The second was a ham and eggs loaf in a can, the nastiest sponge you ever chewed on. No amount of tobasco sauce could make em eatable! I would eat everything else in the box and throw them away. Before I got out they were transitioning to MRE’s. I wasn’t a big fan! The new ones my son bring home to me aren’t bad but I still prefer the C- rats! Semper Fi!!!
Never got the loaf variety, although heard about it later in the hospital.
MRE’s I’ve tried and they’ll get you by, but that’s about it. The old C-rations
offered real food no matter how processed and the food packed real punch too.
Along with the cigarettes, no less. All the boxes lacked was a small can of Pabst
or Blatz.
Semper fi,
Jim
Evening Jim, LOL, You survived on Ham and Mothers, I survived on Ham and Green Eggs, or as it said on the boxes, Ham and Eggs Chopped Water Added….. The saving grace was the cheese wiz that came with them, I would heat them up with a little JP-4, melt the cheese, and pour it all over the green eggs and ham, I was never at a loss for something to eat, always had about a dozen of them stuffed in the storage …….. The joys of C-rat cuisine, I wish I could find some again and see if they still taste as good as I remember them? To each their own……
Semper Fi/This We Will Defend. Bob.
My second favorite and yes, you can find them on Ebay but the risk is fairly high that
they’ve gone bad. The cans they used back then were not made real well, and most have rusted through.
The only way to know if the stuff has gone bad is to eat it…and I won’t go that far!
Semper fi,
Jim
“This aint Quantico” So much said in so few words.
It was funny that some of the enlisted Marines, who’d likely never been to Quantico, knew it so well
as the sort of heart and soul of Marine leadership.
Thanks for the excerpted comment….
Semper fi,
Jim
Excellent as usual.
“Running Bear dove in the water, Little White Dove did the same. And they swam out toward each other, through the swirling stream they came. As their hands touched, and their lips met, the raging river pulled them down. Now they’ll always be together, in their Happy hunting ground.” Hopefully this is not a portent of things to come….
Oh man, you had to go into the other lyrics. The song was always kind of dumb on lyrics but the music itself was so
addictive….and home…
Semper fi,
Jim
LT. Jim, caught some of a TV documentary on the experiences of some Vietnam soldiers who served “in country” like you did. Even after multiple decades passing since their service to their country, most related how they had battled (or were still battling) war-related demons of their combat experiences in Vietnam.
Someone on the show said [paraphrasing]…”…even though they brought a soldier home and out of the country (Vietnam), they could never seem to take the country [Vietnam experiences] out of the soldier.” I though of you and your men under your command…God Bless, Sir. Still thoroughly enjoying every segment you put up and anxiously await each new one…keep on keeping on…
Thanks fo the great comment Walt and the compliment inherent in the words.
Much appreicate you making thes comments on here where everyone can see them too….
Semper fi,
Jim
Ham and mothers are to you what spinach is to Popeye. Semper Fi LT.
That was very true, and I would eat them today if they still made the mix.
You can’t eat the old C-Rations because the cans have all gone to hell.
I tried ordering off Ebay!
Semper fi,
Jim
Great reading. Brings back plesant on not so plesant memories. Got a little confused in reading middle chapters of second 10 days. You refer to Stevens but then you referred to Stephens? in the middle Are they one in the same? Maybe need an edit?
Al, E Co 2nd Bn 9thMar. ‘Feb66-Mar67
Yes, clerical error by the chief clerk…that would be me! Thanks for picking it up so I can correct it.
Or Chuck, who is better at it.
Thanks for the help, and the neat compliment…
Semper fi,
Jim
We are so fortunate to have such sharp readers……
Found the “Stephens” and believe all are corrected.
Thanks, Al.
Thanks for your sharp reading eye, Al
I think we have the “Stephens” problem corrected.
Thanks again.
Dear Sir,
I am just blown away by this story, your writing and most importantly you and your men. I recently watched Ken Burns Vietnam and there was a quote that Vincent Okamoto gave about his men. “They didn’t have escape routes that the elite, the wealthy and the privileged had. And that was unfair. And so they looked upon military service as..like the weather. You had to go in and you do it. But to see these kids who had the least to gain, there wasn’t anything to look forward to, they weren’t going to be rewarded for their service in Vietnam. And yet their infinite patience, their loyalty to each other, their courage under fire was truly phenomenal. And you would ask yourself, how does America produce young men like this?” God bless you sir and all of the men that did what they had to do.
There was no question that the collection of men and boys was something indeed.
Surprises all the way around. They never failed in the missions but they were failed all the time
by piss poor leadership…
Semper fi, and thanks for the compliment written into your words…
Jim
Still here and reading. Haven’t sent any emails as I figure you are getting ready to soon wrap up the Second 10 Days and are pretty occupied, but we will get back on track soon. I can just see Nguyen standing to the back and side of you at the Thursday morning meeting at Geneva Java, and everyone there nervously looking at him if they are disagreeing with you. One note on Tex’s .45. The custom .45’s are not fragile, they are just more precisely made, with less clearance that the normal government model, and thus could more likely jam from mud and dirt. However, my Colt National Match has never shown that tendency, and has never jammed except when the firing pin stop had to be replaced. I, too, anxiously await the next chapter, and check almost daily.
You are correct Joe, about the Colt. Never had one fail, there or back here.
Never had a failure to fire either, which speaks to the outstanding U.S. ammunition then and now.
Glad you came to visit and really complimented by that effort. Thank you so much.
Semper fi, your friend,
Jim
Your story continues to keep me drawn in. Not looking forward to its ending, but every story has one. Will this be the real end of the story? When finished, provide an epilog giving us what followed with your time in the Corp.
The series will end and the book following will be about getting out of the Corps at that time and then
the books that follow that will be about going to work for President Nixon on the Nixon estate in San Clemente.
I was a long way from being done with my wild life when I got out of the Corps.
Semper fi, and thanks for asking and wanting more.
Jim
Am continually fascinated by the by-play on going between you and the Gunny Lt. At every seemingly critical juncture it appears that you both come to the same conclusions from different angles. Symbiotic relationship is the term which comes to mind. Can’t decide whether it’s deliberate in your writing or something that has just developed over time. Which ever, as I said, fascinating!
It was a complex and fascinating relationship, especially in retrospect. Living it was a bit more hairy and problematic.
Thanks for the compliment and for writing it here in public…
Semmper fi,
Jim
Praying for others is always acceptable to the Big Guy up there! Putting others before yourself, is the primary lesson in life here on earth.
Thanks J. So, today, I am praying for you. Happy Thanksgiving, my friend!!!
Semper fi,
Jim
Praying for others is always acceptable to the Big Guy up there!
Well okay. I shall do so for you this very minute. Don’t be upset if the roof comes down and lightening tries to find you
in the rubble though…
Semper fi, and God bless you,
Jim
James, if that were the case, you would no longer be around as your name has been constantly brought up before the Lord, by those of us who are less worthy then you think of yourself.
Bottom line, none of us are worthy, but He loves us all! If that were not the case, we would all be gone from this planet.
Your blessings are accepted and may they be returned several fold. Semper fi my friend.
Words of wisdom, as usual. I read. I think about the words. Thank you….
Semper fi,
Jim
Thank you Mr Strauss! I meet with the surgeon today! I look forward to every chapter! A thank you for this wonderful edge of your seat story and keep em coming!!!
Praying for you David…hope that’s acceptable to the Big Guy up there.
Thanks for the compliment. Means a lot.
Semper fi,
Jim
Spent my time, 1968-69, on a B52 base in the pacific. You have a talent that brings across what a mess the place in hell was. Thank you.
Correction: āClews is going to call us up on the radio after dawn,ā like he said. āWeāve got about three hours to make time.ā I donāt think you need the internal quote marks.
Thanks for being part of the editing team. Chuck will fix this tomorrow.
And thanks for the compliment…
Semper fi,
Jim
āGiftā, sounds like you finally proved yourself to the grunts. For what itās worth, I only had one Lt. in S. Korea that earned it and he had to be a Nam vet, we went through several before him.
What you write letās me compare my time with one of your grunts and it leaves me lacking. Pick any rifleman in any squad, he marched off to kick ass where ever needed while for most of my tour it was stay where you are and tell us (on the obscure chance) when the North jumps. Apples, oranges, luck of the draw, you got the shit, I got the toilet paper.
Thanks Walt, as usual, for the pithy neat comment. Always thinking, and always on top of things.
Thanks a lot for coming in like you do on here.
Semper fi,
Jim
I read some of these comments and Iām humbled. What could I possibly contribute that would add anything to the conversation? This story has become important to me in ways I didnāt anticipate. I think the reason for that is not just the obvious tension created by the A Shau itself, but the wonderful characters youāve brought to life! From Nuygen to Sugar Daddy they come alive in your writing Jim. As always I look forward to the next chapter. Semper Fi!
You are most welcome Jack and it is a pleasure to know you and read your stuff on here.
The compliments inherent in your words do not miss me by any stretch…and sometimes that is what keeps me
going through the mess of this whole thing…
Semper fi,
Jim
Getting respect is the first sign of a good leader, gaining everyone’s respect is reaching the Great level , which you are heading for . Awesome read, thank you so much for sharing. Best thing I’ve read in do years !!!
What is respect? That’s a tough one in combat.
Things change at an elemental fear-based level.
Respect goes right out the window of harsh circumstance and then maybe comes back in later….
while still waiting to be defined.
Thanks for the terrific compliment…for which I give you my respect!
And appreciation, of course…
Semper fi,
Jim
Okay James…….here’s my first criticism of your entire work so far – where the HECK is the link to “Running Bear”? I LOVE THAT SONG! Okay okay……I’ll look it up myself.
Gary……
It was intended but pushed publish button too early.
Running Bear is now on site.
Thanks for your support.
Semper fi,
Jim
Your leadership is infectious. They are doing what you want thinking it was their idea. Your survival has become their ticket home. All of us just said “get some”. Your endurance had been incredible. Thank you.
Endurance. That was the word. Not spoken or even really thought of at the time.
I am reminded me of Shackleton in the Antarctic or even those sailors with Bligh sailing the world
all the way back to England in a lifeboat. Endurance. Bearing down and just going on, one step at a time,
in pain all the way…
Semper fi,
Jim
Oh darn ,I read it and know have wait for more, thanks for great reading enjoyed every bit of it!
Thanks for the compliment of wanting more and faster…
Spurs me ever onward…
Semper fi,
Jim
Excellent! Your gift given, given in service, as their muse.
I’m not sure if this needs an edit, yet in third paragraph Junior imagined taking Nguyen back home…”I smiled ruefully about how great it would be to have the silent Montagnard at my right hand, my beck and call,…” Should this be beck and call or beckoned call?
Thanks for this and for what’s coming!
Thank your Dennis for the compliment and the notice.
I made slight adjustment.
Semper fi,
Jim
“Beck and call” is correct.
(You can even Google it.)
Looking forward to each section. Thanks.
I was a tank platoon leader in the Army. Volunteered for VN, but they sent me to Texas.
Texas was just a tad better! Or so I hope.. Thanks for the compliment.
Semper fi,
Jim
Was a young boy, called himself Tom… his parents were killed because they would not support the north… would show up quite often,,, was my buddy,, one night during the monsoons we were pulled out of the bush and put on bridge guard , the VC/NVA had a PA system out in the trees somewhere.. taunting us,, they knew we were wet and haddent been supplied for a few days, so hungery.. telling us to come out and eat with them and other craft… by order Tom was to be put out of the parimiter at night,, but I had kept him with me under the poncho hootch that three of us on that hole watch had put togeather.. any way after s few arty calls in the location of where the speaker was little Tom told me he knew where the Bad guys were.. took him to the CP and he showed them on the map .. fire was called and there was some screeching and then the speaker went dead..no more taunting.. I wanted to adopet him and bring him home.. have often wondered how he is doing…hope he had a good life
There were those rare creatures who seemed to surmount all association except that of honor.
Nguyen was one. Never knew any other of the indigenous peoples there.
Bitter sweet because no, you don’t get to knwo after all these years. Another price, unspoken
and unheralded, of that war. Maybe all wars. I don’t know. Thanks for the depth and meaning of your comment.
Semper fi,
Jim
“Getting that from them,” the Gunny said, “that’s your gift”.”Wow,coming from the Gunny” .Semper fi Lt.
I was as surprised as most of the readers when he said. I didn’t really understand it at the time though.
Why was their singing the lyrics from the song something that was attributable to any talent of mine. I knew I was
great at map reading and calling artillery, but that was it. The rest I saw as just running like hell for my life.
And my leadership talent was mostly making up shit, lying and trying to figure out a plant that would first keep me alive.
thanks for the comment.
Semper fi,
Jim
If I had the word passed to me that we were going on Operation Little White Dove. That song would have been the first thing that popped into my head. Grew up with that song as a kid.
I remember an Operation Big Horn. I didn’t like that name at all.
Thanks for the comment on Little White Dove. I still like that song although in listening to the rather weird story and lyrics
I don’t know why. Maybe the nature of the music that lays the foundation for the words.
Thanks for commenting,
Semper fi,
Jim
James, this response has me thinking again,I know dangerous, but your Marines may have been seeing you reflecting themselves, and the way they were driven to survive, first and foremost. But it may have also been too long since they had seen leadership care as much for his dead as he did for the survivors so you maybe had been adopted by the informal tribe of survivors.
Too much speculation but it helps me see the true humanity in men like yourselves. Things still cannot be like they were, but you still keep trying. Character is an attribute to strive for, and I believe you and your tribe had it in spade. Poppa
Thanks Poppa J. We didn’t think so at the time, about the character. We ran on automatic a whole lot.
As least I know I did. And we ran on adrenalin. All the time.
Thanks for pointing out interesting stuff like you always bring up.
Semper fi,
Jim
I wait with anticipation every week for the next chapter in a outstanding novel.. this is better then Clancy..!!!
Thank you so much James. I am into the second to the last segment of the Second Ten Days tomorrow and hope to be done
with the book and have it off to Amazon by the weekend. With the support and assistance of guys like you. The extra little help that I occasinally need to
get along, so to speak…Thanks so much…better than Tom Clancy is pretty high praise….
Semper fi,
Jim
Would Keatingās more delicately made Colt even go off? I think you meant Tex’s. Another great chapter. Thanks
You are totally correct. How did I get that wrong?
Semper fi,
Jim
Jim we both seem about the same age, old farts so you pass that little miss step to C.R.S. [CAN’T REMEMBER SHIT] end quote !!
Thanks Harold. I wish I had remembered to do that!
Semper fi,
Jim
A full night’s sleep. Hooray! What did you do with your second dog tag? Lace it into your boots?
So Johnsen is nominally CO of Kilo but departed with Clews leaving you in command of Mike and Kilo?
Thanks for another gripping installment.
… and clean that .45
Clean the .45, indeed. Funny how stuff like that ate its way into your soul at the time, and then you get home get out of the hospital and there’s like nothing. No weapons to check, clean or even handle, and of course nothing much firing in the distance or close by either. I still listen sometimes when I walk by the stream that runs about a hundred yards from my house. The big pines whisper in the light wind and the water ruffles along beside me. I close my eyes and listen. Nobody on earth, except you here and now, know what I am listening for. Some of you would accurately guess though.
Semper fi,
Jim
At this point in the story, it sounds like the Gunny is primarily responsible for the company’s reputation as fuckups. The night you came into the company, the Gunny had someone putting something in the officer’s boots. It was also the same time that Jurgen’s men were sneaking up to take you out, if one recalls correctly.
While the Gunny generally hangs out with each new CO that comes in, he is never there to save their bacon. He also stands up for the two primary platoon leaders, that never like to obey orders. He grudgingly gives into you, when he has nowhere else to turn, but is always questioning your recommendations. Who is he really trying to please?
Not only does the Gunny disobey the request of Kilo’s CO, to dig in around the perimeter, but he also informs you that he is leaving the area because he knows what is going to happen. Then he helps himself to appropriating supplies that are supposed to go along with Clews and his men, once again putting you on the spot. You are the CO of C company and he knows it will be you that gets the blame.
Leaders set the example for the troops in the company and Gunny is their primary leader who they rely on for final decisions. It looks more likely to me, that Gunny is the primary problem for your company and most of the so called fuckups that take place. Yet he knows that the CO will take the blame for everything, so what has he got to lose?
You see all of this happening, yet you know that the Gunny is the only experienced man to seek advice from and to keep the reprobates from trying to kill you. It is definitely an ironic position to be in. You either hold up the rules and regulations and die, or you look the other way just to survive. You are ate up with guilt, yet you are happy that you are still alive. One could get easily paranoid in that situation.
The Gunny proved to be one of the most enigmatic and mysterious characters of my entire life,
and I have known a few characters.
I worked closely with him, around him, with him and against him….all together and apart at different times.
I liken his conduct to a survival mechanism similar to my own but different.
We did indeed have different talents and he was a whole lot like that guy who takes over
in the Stalag 17 Movie, played by William Holden.
I don’t know who I was like but I’m sure someone (if not you) will find a suitable character in some show from sometime back.
Everything you say in the analysis here is so very interesting.
I”ve never thought about a whole lot of what you write but I’m thinking now.
I would never have believed I could be writing the novels and then being taught about what
might have really happened to the people reading alone as I write.
It’s weirdly and wildly illuminating in a very strange way. Uncomfortable but magnetic, if you get my meaning.
What was the Gunny, really? Who was he?
Semper fi, and my greatest thanks and admiration for you and your brain…
Jim
James, I don’t have the time to proof read your every word. I am riveted to the story you are unraveling and my brain must be compensating for any error you may make. Please keep it coming. I was in Nam in 65/66 with 9th Marines. I credit me surviving my ordeal was I wasn’t there when the real s@#t hit the fan. Thank you for your service.
Yes, Dennis. I do not believe I could have flown in at a worse time and then landed in about the worst place of all…Da Nang.
Funny how real life is about where and when we are somewhere being so causal, when we all think we are so self determined. LIke when someone once
told me that he was not ruled by any chemicals in his body. I asked him if he was hungry after eating two lbs of prime rib. Of course he was no longer hungry.
That quick. And how about interest in sex right after sex? Like gone, man. Chemicals in the body influening thought and actions. Fear does the same thing.
It hits and you dont’ think or act the same, that quick. Reflection is for back here, before the fire, with the cat or dog and the family. It does not
happen in combat. You just move and keep moving or die where you are. Without going back for Kemp he would have stayed frozen in his little hideaway
and that would have been it.
Thanks for the compliment and the writing of it on here…
Semper fi,
Jim
I donāt think the .45 ACP round is supersonic.
You would be absolutely correct. I looked it up. I was wrong in my thinking back then. The .45 ACP at 845 fps travels well below the speed of sound.
Semper fi, and thanks,
Jim
My dad served in the Corps during WW2. The Colt 45 was his favorite weapon. I remember as a kid, him telling me the 230 grain bullet combined with its subsonic speed, was like getting hit in the chest with a 30lb sledge hammer. Saved his bacon on numerous occasions. I carry one to this very day for protection. As usual Sir, your writing is superb and riveting. Can’t wait for the next segment!
Thanks Tim. Yes, tht .45 Colt…and the Thompson firing the same round with the 30 round stacked magazine.
Devastating even in this modern day and age…only if needed, of course.
Thanks for the compliment and the revelation in your comment…
Semper fi,
Jim
That 230 gr round is not supersonic, but under that Ontos it would have been nose bleed loud.
You are correct. About 300 feet per second less than supersonic at sea level.
My mistake, but I thought it was supersonic in those early days.
Semper fi,
Jim
Two suggested edits. You wrote: The Gunny was almost directly between Jurgens and (I), but, if I recovered by rolling to my stomach before I squeezed off the first round, Iād miss him, although the supersonic shock wave of the bullet going by so close would be damaging in a way I couldnāt predict or do anything about. Edit needed: replace “I” with “me”
You wrote: āNah,ā the Gunny said, flicking the remains of the cigarette out onto the mud. āYeah, youāre good at that. I mean listen (though.)ā Suggested edit: replace “though.” with an ellipsis. Sentence would read: “I mean listen…”
You are on top of it.
Thanks Steve W.
Corrected
Semper fi,
Jim
If you end a sentence with an ellipsis, you need 4 dots, not 3, because you are including the period that ends the sentence.
If we go get Clews, and those guys are still alive, then theyāll pull us out with Kilo and weāll get time in the rear.ā
It was a helluva a lie, but it gave the Marines something called “hope” didn’t it.
How you can come up with the plan names like that especially under that kind of pressure amazes me James !!!
Outstanding telling of your story sir.
SEMPER Fi and keep writing !!!
It was a world of deception, down in that valley, of a different sort than back here.
Hence the difficulty of training for it from back here…and of course, because almost nobody
does the training that really walked the walk.
Semper fi,
Jim
Another outstanding segment James…the men are really starting to take to your leadership…they are singing for you again… and what leader doesn’t bullshit his men when he knows it’s needed to accomplish the goal…I think you may be saving Clews’s bacon, if he survives long enough, and surely some of his men…you have the heart and soul of a leader, the marine part included…we are all hung here on this journey, with our memories, as we wait to see what “junior” does next…and what happens in the light of day…
Thanks for the neat compliment so well written Mark. Means a lot to me, as I know you know.
The light of the day is dawning, as the second ten days comes to a head and the next ten days begins.
Thanks for being along for the ride and enjoying the experience, as much of it that can be enjoyed, I mean.
Semper fi,
Jim
James…I read all the comments, like many I assume, but when you mentioned fear making you do things to survive, I thought of my 94 year old WWII vet friend that has several medals for valor. When I talked to him after basic training…he said something that mirrors what you said…he said “we were just a bunch of kids, all scared to death…the only difference between a hero and a coward is which direction you run…I just ran the right way a few times”…that was his response when I called him a hero…much like some of your responses when singled out for your leadership and valor…
Neat that he would echo what I have written on here. He was there. He is real. Not many of those around.
Thanks for the verification and the high compliment at the end…
Semper fi,
Jim
It’s great to see Stars and Strips delivered the mail.
Yes, I knew they would. I just knew it. When I wrote the chapter I forgot that I had written those words with the Major’s pen on the front.
I went through the letters and that comment took me right back to that moment in time. And then I read the graphic part underneath and about choked.
I can’t believe I let some of that crap through to my wife. I asked her about it recently and she said she never really believed it. Good news there.
Thanks for the comment.
Semper fi,
Jim
Another great one. What can I say? As Mike Shields said, I don’t want it to end.
As a side note, your books that I ordered from Barnes and Noble arrived today. It was a very painless transaction. Now I have a lot of reading to do…….
Ken
Neat unreserved compliment in your words Ken and it spurs me on to continue. Thanks for that and thanks a million for bying my books
Hope you love them.
Semper fi,
Jim
When my first ten days appeared here in the Peens, I can’t say I was surprised. You said it would happen.
Because I am in the Peens and it is wet, I put it in a Zip-Loc and purged the air and I don’t open it. I have very few possessions that are dear to me. Dog tags, P-38 and some ribbons That book is one. I read only what I get here on line. Saved and re read.
That brings me to i-books or e-books. Please tell me you will make it happen. I will subscribe and read all when you do.
The beer is cold. Life is good. The is an island just south of me with a bay full of Jap ships to dive on.
I know you are up to your pits in alligators right now but when you take a break you could bring the other two with you.
Stay low, keep movin and change yer fuckin socks.
Sounds like you have found the spot.
Currently The First ten days is available in the
.ePub version (nook and other forms)
and
.mobi (Kindle)
Right here oin site.
Go here and Choose
Ebooks First Ten Days
Second Ten Days before end of month.
Thank you for your support.
Semper fi,
Jim
I am so tickled that you got the book!! I never know, sending it out there in the world.
I can always send another if you want to have a reading copy laying around.
The Second Ten Days is one or two segments from being done so should be out later this month.
The books are all going out as electronic too. First Ten Days is available on Kindle
and on NOOK at Barnes and Noble. Thanks so much for reading, liking and being my special friend in inviting me to come to the ‘Peens.’
Semper fi, my friend,
Jim
James: this doggie says you can make all the bloody typos you want, bothers me not one whit!! Write on gyreen!!!!
Thanks for that great succinct compliment James. Really appreciate it.
Semper fi,
Jim
Don’t know if this is the time or place to post this but I feel the need to do so. It comes from a friend who also once served…Another contribution from my friend Pete.
Well written.ā
He was getting old and paunchy
And his hair was falling fast,
And he sat around the Legion,
Telling stories of the past.
Of a war that he once fought in
And the deeds that he had done,
In his exploits with his buddies;
They were heroes, every one.
And tho’ sometimes to his neighbours
His tales became a joke,
All his buddies listened quietly
For they knew whereof he spoke.
But we’ll hear his tales no longer,
For old Bob has passed away,
And the world’s a little poorer
For a Soldier died today.
He won’t be mourned by many,
Just his children and his wife.
For he lived an ordinary,
Very quiet sort of life.
He held a job and raised a family,
Going quietly on his way;
And the world won’t note his passing,
Tho’ a Soldier died today.
When politicians leave this earth,
Their bodies lie in state.
While thousands note their passing,
And proclaim that they were great.
Papers tell of their life stories
From the time that they were young.
But the passing of a Soldier
Goes unnoticed, and unsung.
Is the greatest contribution
To the welfare of our land,
Someone who breaks his promise
And cons his fellow man?
Or the ordinary fellow
Who in times of war and strife,
Goes off to serve his country
And offers up his life?
The politicianās stipend
And the style in which he lives,
Are often disproportionate,
To the service that he gives.
While the ordinary Soldier,
Who offered up his all,
Is paid off with a medal
And perhaps a pension – though small.
It is not the politicians
With their compromise and ploys,
Who won for us the freedom
That our country now enjoys.
Should you find yourself in danger,
With your enemies at hand,
Would you really want some cop-out,
With his ever waffling stand?
Or would you want a Soldier –
His home, his country, his kin,
Just a common Soldier,
Who would fight until the end?
He was just a common Soldier,
And his ranks are growing thin,
But his presence should remind us
We may need his like again.
For when countries are in conflict,
We find the Soldier’s part,
Is to clean up all the troubles
That the politicians start.
If we cannot do him honour
While he’s here to hear the praise,
Then at least let’s give him homage
At the ending of his days.
Perhaps just a simple headline
In the paper that might say:
“OUR COUNTRY IS IN MOURNING,
A SOLDIER DIED TODAY.”
Patriotism ā Pass it on! …. YOU can make a difference!!!
God Bless You James Strauss… Semper Fi
Thanks Jack, means a lot, especially from you…
Semper fi,
Jim
Great piece and I am publishing it on here Jack. Thank you…
Semper fi,
Jim
Thanks Jim. To this day I struggle with the fact I was fortunate? enough to not have gone in country as you and so many others did. The loss of some great friends coming home in those bags, plus the loss of some great friends coming home but never coming home and for them not being able to relate as to what it was like being in country. Listening to the bullshit news from political agendas. Watching one of the best friend I’ve ever had die such a slow death from results of Agent Orange last year(Huey Pilot)….crap, he may have been one covering your ass while you were there. Veterans Day this year, at 68 years old is the first time I literally broke down in tears. Actually (even though I’m retired but work general maintenance at an Assisted Living Facility here) I had to get up and leave in the middle of a celebration being held on behalf of veterans. For that I thank you from the farthest depths of my shallow soul. We both served in the same period of time but not in the same world. I’m not a writer. I don’t know the right words to express what it means to hear the truth of what it was for all of you who served, survived and gave all in that pot of hell. Looking forward for the rest of this saga… Semper Fi Jim
Well, for not being a writer you did pretty damned will here on this comment. Deep, penetrating and meaningful. I felt you words and feel your pain.
I am glad you are here and not dead. I like that, even though I don’t know you in person. You sound like a real class act. If you had gone with me asnd
stood shoulder to shoulder with me you would still be here but only alive in the story. I am glad also that you think and feel deeply. That is one of God’s gifts
to special people. You get to know. The wonderful gift and, at the same time, the awful demon.
Thanks for writing this.
Semper fi,
Jim
Sounds like sugar daddy is in your camp now and he just wants to keep his men alive in this he’ll hole.
The waxing and waning of support in combat is without parallel and, although it goes on back here in
the world, it is much more subtle here…where there it is ever present and inescapable.
Thanks for the great comment.
Semper fi,
Jim
Sound wisdom from Sugar Daddy! šŗšøš¦
Sugar Daddy’s wisdom is sound. But there is more meaning that is not spoken! I needed to clarify my comment! God bless!
Thanks Tommy. I think we all got the depth of your comment…
Semper fi,
Jim
It would seem so, although I had to think about for quite awhile when I was in country.
Thanks for pointing it out here though.
Semper fi,
JIm
Even more visual a telling than ever before. Doing the right thing is rarely easy Another gotāer done. LT. Poppa
Thanks, as usual, Poppa J. You are always so spot on with your comments, and here too.
Semper fi,
Jim
Sorry Jim, Iām not editing, but reading and recalling the A Shau.
I really enjoyed the first 10 days and this one as well. Great job
Thanks Dan, I appreciate the read and the writing about it on here so everyone can see…
Semper fi,
Jim
Still here and reading this fantastic story.
A few edits:
I felt vital, alive and so filled with energy I wanted to get up and move about. I needed food and water, and I needed to get out of the cave. I hadnāt heard the CH-46 leaving or (returned), if it had returned. Iād heard nothing, and that fact was hard to believe, since my nineteenth night had been the first Iād truly slept through since Iād been in country. (returning)
I crawled under the hull at the front of the Ontos. The space was confined, with the armor slanting slightly above my (heard,) angling down from front to back, it was barely visible in the dark at all. (head,)
āIf we stayed here until morning thereād be hell to pay,ā I replied, without going further into the lies Iād told. āAir support may or may (not) come back, but Stars and Stripes are gone, our special combined arms command is gone, and weāre likely to be left as sitting ducks. (add not)
Thanks again Richard,
Corrected thanks to your sharp eye
Semper fi,
Jim
“Air support may or may () come back,. . .” (or may not)
Noted and corrected,
Thanks Mike
Semper fi,
Jim
Another great segment Jim. A great book to me is one that I don’t want to end and I don’t want this one to end. I don’t think anyone has said that you can get the books on IBooks if you have an apple device . That is how I got the first ten days. Looking forward to the second ten days!
Yes Mike,
Thanks for mentioning iBooks.
Semper fi,
Jim
Jim,
As many have said, I love your writing. Thank you for your service then and now.
typo:
But the time we reached the Ontos again it was starting to move.
should probably be:
By the time we reached the Ontos again it was starting to move.
Many thanks Ed
Noted and corrected,
Semper fi
Jim
Riveting !
This brings the wetness and misery of monsoon back to me. The racial tensions were building quickly in the I Corps area in 66-67. I can still feel that tension and outrage 50 years later. I worked with the 1st and 3rd Marines. As a SeaBee, I could help provide a few luxuries to these guys and I always felt all was secure when with the grunts. They watched over me but would call me to help if they needed a generator fixed at a check point or an extra hand firing the 105’s. I watched animosity between black and white and the same between some of the lower ranking Marines. I kept out of it. All-in-all, the Marines were an awesome group of warriors. I was proud to serve beside them.
Thanks Charles. You were one of those rare guys, like corpsmen, who the Marines think of as Marines and not from another service.
I know you know that. Thanks Marine for your service with us and for being here at my six too.
Semper fi,
Jim
As always, another chapter in one damn crazy story. Well done…
para.1, line 9 reads: “hadnāt heard the CH-46 leaving or returned, if it had returned.” Consider “hadnāt heard the CH-46 leaving or returning, if it had.”
approx halfway down: āAir support may or may [not?] come back,…”
Thanks Lee and our other sharp eyed readers.
Noted and corrected
Semper fi,
Jim
A full minute (when) by, and neither the Gunny nor anyone else said anything during that time. (went)
Hope that ontos makes the trip as soft mud isn’t a good thing with heavy tracked equipment. I am amazed at the ability to pull up plan names on such short notice that fit so well.
Dang it Pete, you are so sharp.
Corrected and thanks.
Semper fi,
Jim
I am impressed by the small details in your book . I was with India Company 3/5 66-67 and have vivid remember of Ham and Lima (mother’s f$$$ker) .The saving grace is that C-ration meal also contained Fruit Cocktail
Semper Fi
For me I think it was the immediate caloric hit of the grease that held the ham and lima beans in stasis.
I needed the immediate energy. I also liked the taste, for whatever reason. And the fruit cocktail was a delight.
I liked the crackers but there were never enough of them and they made me thirsty…
Semper fi, and thanks for mentioning that detail…
Jim
And chocolate I traded my four pack of Cigs for a better food and guess i was weird I liked the ham and eggs with a little heat
Ham and eggs were my second favorite. We had so many cigarettes in extra boxes from
people back home there was no trading of those in my unit. Thanks for the information and for writing it on here…
Semper fi,
Jim
āIf we stayed here until morning thereād be hell to pay,ā I replied, without going further into the lies Iād told. āAir support may or may come back, but Stars and Stripes are gone, our special combined arms command is gone, and weāre likely to be left as sitting ducks. The NVAās going to be pissed as hell, and theyāll be chasing us up north once they figure out we got out asses out of here.
Last sentence: …once they figure out we got “our” assess (not: out)
WOW,
Again your readers are outstanding.
Corrected and Thank You.
Semper fi, Jim