Love And Duty

$36.96 New In stock Publisher: St Martins Pr
SKU: DADAX0312070209
ISBN : 9780312070205
Condition : New
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Love And Duty

Love And Duty

A former POW describes his experiences in a North Vietnamese prison camp, enduring hunger, torture, and the threat of death, while his wife describes her attempts to locate him and have him releasedFrom Publishers WeeklyBen Purcell, a colonel shot down in a helicopter in 1968, was imprisoned in various camps in North Vietnam until 1973, much of the time in solitary confinement. His wife Anne raised their five children, who ranged in age from 212 to 15 during their father's capture, and played an active role in national, state and local Georgia MIA/POW organizations. In this memoir, the Purcells recreate the years of separation, stressing the importance of religion in helping them to survive and to achieve the state of "relinquishment." Purcell, who escaped twice and was recaptured, notes that he has not changed his attitude about the Vietnam War. He recalls with feeling his statement to his captors that he was in Southeast Asia to help the Vietnamese people "determine their own destiny" and expresses puzzlement that the interrogator found his comments funny. In all, an inspiring book, especially for those who are deeply religious. Photos.Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.From Kirkus ReviewsAn affectingly homespun and gritty account of how US Army Colonel Ben Purcell and his wife Anne coped with his five years (1968-73) as a prisoner of the North Vietnamese. Trading off chapters, Ben describes what it's like to have your life taken from you in one stroke of bad luck, while Anne details a sort of widowhood in which she struggles to preserve a tightly woven life in the absence of her beloved partner. The Vietnam-set chapters are gripping, full of drama and telling detail. Knowing he will not get medical aid without cooperating, Purcell spills the beans on US infantry tactics to one ``Pugnose''- -they are based, he says, on man-to-man vs. zone coverage, safety blitzes, end-runs, etc. Pugnose buys Purcell's football-inspired fakery, and the prisoner gets a doctor of sorts. When interrogator ``Crisco'' asks Purcell where the Americans are now that Purcell needs them, a US fighter plane appears from nowhere at treetop level, followed by a deafening sonic boom that terrifies Crisco and ends the interview. Eventually Purcell escapes, but is recaptured, isolated, and forced to subsist on rice and hot water. (The appearance of tea signals further interrogation.) Back home, Anne, who up to now has made all major decisions with her husband, copes with the void as best she can, keeps the car running, and fights the pull of despair, holding her young family (five children) together as much by prayer as by anything. And that is the same glue that binds her husband together: the faith that is the message of this book. At its center is a calm fearlessness that is almost unnerving, even as Purcell's lack of rancor toward his captors is impressive. A powerful, engrossing, well-written documentation of quiet heroism on two fronts. (Sixteen pages of photographs--not seen.) --Copyright

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