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Fields of Fire
Book Reviews
NEWSWEEK:
"In swift,
flexible prose that does everything he asks of it including a whiff of
hilarious farce, just to show he can -- Webb gives us an extraordinary range
of acutely observed people, not one a stereotype, and as many different ways
of looking at (the Vietnam) war. ... FIELDS OF FIRE is a stunner."
TIME:
"Webb's book has the
unmistakable sound of truth acquired the hard way. His men hate the war; it
is lethal fact cut adrift from personal sense. Yet they understand that its
profound insanity, its blood and oblivion, have in some way made them fall
in love with battle and with each other. Back in "the World" they would
never again be so incandescently alive. The point is as old as Homer, of
course, but Webb restates it with merciless precision."
PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER:
"Webb has rehabilitated the idea of the American hero -not John Wayne, to be
sure, but every man, caught up in circumstances beyond his control,
surviving the blood, dreck and absurdity with dignity and even a certain
élan. FIELDS OF FIRE is an antiwar book, yes, but not naively, dumbly
anti-soldier or anti-American.... Webb pulls off all the scabs and looks
directly, unflinchingly on the open wounds of the Sixties."
NAVAL
WAR COLLEGE REVIEW: "The
sound and smell of combat permeates FIELDS OF FIRE with a completeness that
is extraordinary and a realism that is almost eerie. ... at the end the
reader is disappointed only because there is no more good reading. ... While
the reviewer has not read all of the books about Vietnam, he has read most
of them. FIELDS OF FIRE is unquestionably the best. The rest aren't even
close."
SOLDIER
OF FORTUNE MAGAZINE: "If
a grateful government wished to extend a meaningful GI benefit to the
infantrymen who fought in Vietnam, it could simply send each a copy of
FIELDS OF FIRE. They would then know that their suffering, courage and
seemingly limitless endurance will be forever recorded. James Webb has
immortalized them. ...certainly a classic war novel, among the best of the
past 35 years."
BEST
SELLERS: "This is not a
war novel about Vietnam but rather a people novel about people fighting in
Vietnam. ... The selling point of this work is the characters. As a
non-lover of war novels, this reviewer recommends the reading of FIELDS OF
FIRE."
HOUSTON
POST: "Webb's style has
the primitive power of a James Jones, ... but few writers since (Stephen)
Crane have portrayed men at war with such a ring of steely truth."
BURTON
FRYE PREVIEWS: "...it
zooms in and out with the vast ability of a motion picture camera. New
novelist Webb has more talent than Hemingway had."
DALLAS
MORNING NEWS: "It is time
for the novel of the Vietnam soldier. This, I think, is it. ... Webb has
written it so powerfully that as you read, you wonder, where did that talent
come from? ... This book seems really to have come from that old cliché
source, the heart. Webb means to make you know what it was like for a
handful of Young Americans fighting for their lives... He means to make you
know that they mattered. And he does."
TEXAS
MONTHLY (William Broyles
editorial): "A decade after the worst years of the Vietnam War, hundreds of
books about it are in print (the best being FIELDS OF FIRE by James Webb).
JOHN J.
McALEER (Personal correspondence):
"FIELDS OF FIRE is unquestionably the finest war novel ever written. ...
Having done nine other books before UNIT PRIDE , all of them in the field of
literary criticism or literary biography, I know a great book when I see
one. And FIELDS OF FIRE is unmistakably a masterpiece."
James Webb was an
Assistant Secretary of Defense and Secretary of the Navy in the Reagan
Administration.
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