Ngo The Vinh was an ARVN Airborne Ranger M.D. during the Vietnam War.
This author, winner of the 1971 National Prize for Literature for his
novel The Green Belt, ironically was also penalized for his writing when
he was summoned to the court of law because of the title story of this
collection: “The Battle of Saigon”.
This short story records the
spiritual journey of a soldier who accepts sacrifice and hardship in the
struggle for freedom of South Vietnam, a soldier who at the same time
longs for a better society in the future. For the contents of this
work, Ngo The Vinh was accused of using the press to circulate arguments
that were deemed detrimental to public order, that militated against the
discipline and fighting spirit of the army, a collective of which he
himself was a member.
Like the title story, the other eleven works in this collection, half of
them created before and the other half after 1975, present war and
post-war traumatic experiences and dreams from the perspective of
Vietnamese Diaspora.
“The Battle of Saigon” has never ended and also will never end. The
reality turns out to be that a writer possesses no power other than a
sensitive heart that foresees in whole the Collective Pain. Everyone
should read The Battle of Saigon, and re-read it in order to reduce to
some extent the cruelty and ruthlessness of the battle prevailing at
present in Saigon, even in Hanoi, in the Central Highlands, in each of
us here, overseas Vietnamese residing in the United States of America. (Phan
Nhat Nam, author of The Prisoners of War).
The Battle of Saigon
can be
purchased through the Xlibris Web site at:
http://www.Xlibris.com/bookstore
or by calling 1-888-795-4274. The book is also available for sale
through the major online booksellers:
www.Amazon.com,
www.Barnesandnoble.com,
www.Borders.com
and your local bookstore or
www.ngothevinh.com
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