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The Vietnam War
- An Intimate History
- Narrated by: Fred Sanders, Ken Burns, Brian Corrigan
- Length: 31 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: History, Americas
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Publisher's Summary
From the award-winning historian and filmmakers of The Civil War, Baseball, The War, The Roosevelts, and others: a vivid, uniquely powerful history of the conflict that tore America apart - the companion volume to the major multipart PBS film to be aired in September 2017.
More than 40 years after it ended, the Vietnam War continues to haunt our country. We still argue over why we were there, whether we could have won, and who was right and wrong in their response to the conflict. When the war divided the country, it created deep political fault lines that continue to divide us today. Now, continuing in the tradition of their critically acclaimed collaborations, the authors draw on dozens and dozens of interviews in America and Vietnam to give us the perspectives of people involved at all levels of the war: US and Vietnamese soldiers and their families, high-level officials in America and Vietnam, antiwar protestors, POWs, and many more. The book plunges us into the chaos and intensity of combat, even as it explains the rationale that got us into Vietnam and kept us there for so many years. Rather than taking sides, the book seeks to understand why the war happened the way it did and to clarify its complicated legacy. Beautifully written, this is a tour de force that is certain to launch a new national conversation.
Critic Reviews
"Lucid, flowing, and dramatic...robustly detailed writing...eye-opening...powerful in its own right.... In their new 'intimate' yet capacious history, the award-winning, audience-enthralling duo of historian and screenwriter Ward and documentarian extraordinaire Burns investigate the complex, divisive, and tragic Vietnam War from a unique plurality of perspectives." (Donna Seaman, Booklist)
"The melancholy tone of Ken Burns's voice exactly suits the mood of this history of the Vietnam War... Burns adds no false drama but always reads with a tone of respect for the front-line combatants and the earnest opponents.... Overall, the audio does the print version full justice." (AudioFile)
Featured Article: The Best Vietnam War Audiobooks, Fiction and Nonfiction
Over the past four decades, many people have written about the Vietnam War in an effort to make sense of the raging debates, the staggering death and destruction, and the lingering trauma. History is often complicated, biased, or missing key information, especially when it comes to war. Arm yourself with comprehensive knowledge of the conflict with our selection of titles detailing the Vietnam War, from fiction to nonfiction, personal stories to histories.
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What listeners say about The Vietnam War
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Arthur
- 10-13-17
Adds more detail to the PBS Documentary
I listened to this audiobook and watched the Ken Burns Documentary at the same time. Both were excellent. This audiobook tracks well with the Documentary through 1970 but it adds some more detail such as an analysis of what Kennedy would do if he wasn't assassinated which wasn't in the Documentary.
While the Documentary was excellent and by far the best I have seen on the Vietnam war - I was disappointed with the Documentary's coverage after 1970 - it appears that perhaps the TV producers ran short of funding and did a relatively cursory coverage of the last 4.5 years. That being said, the audiobook continued to have excellent coverage after 1970 and contains a lot that was obviously cut out of the Documentary and that I wish was in there. For example, the audiobook contains excellent analysis of the Vietnamese diaspora which was almost entirely missing from the Documentary.
24 people found this helpful
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- Gillian
- 09-14-17
Breathtaking In Scope; Heartbreaking In Reality
I bought The Vietnam War because I respect Ken Burns and, well, I wanted to make sense of what I saw on TV and in the newspapers when I was just a little kid.
This book is mindblowing in its scope, in the detail, in the amount of research that was poured into it. It covers about every viewpoint a reader/listener could ask for: background shenanigans at the White House, a grunt's view, the war back home (from peaceful demonstrators to those who made the peace movement something Nixon's public hated/feared); Vietnamese civilians trying to live in the midst of chaos, North Vietnamese and the NLF who were willing to sacrifice everything and kill every American they could.
And much, much more.
It's all delivered in the tones of skilled documentarians who sometimes skimp on the emotion but always, always, deliver blows with dead accuracy. Sometimes devastating, sometimes heartrending, the same tones are used.
And that's the only, only flaw I could find with this audiobook.
Everything else? Well, I'm still wondering how the heartbreak I saw on TV after watching Captain Kangaroo, after hearing at my grade school about POWs, happened: It's all so very tragic, and the fact that we can find lines that trickle their way through our current actions and inactions just about rips my heart out.
Listen to this if you want great history. You won't be disappointed.
31 people found this helpful
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- Sarah Friedrich
- 10-24-19
Good but not without idealogy
Good book but definitely had a push towards the evils of the United States in it. I found that it was thorough in terms of history but perhaps that it belabored certain points causing the book to be a little daunting to finish.
7 people found this helpful
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- Mark W Matthews PhD
- 03-20-19
Adds depth and breadth to the documentary
Following the same timeline and high points as the television documentary, the book provides breadth and depth too many of the interviews and accounts not able to be fully unwrapped on film. In particular there are essays discussing topics such as, a comparison and contrast between Ho Chi Minh and president Diem and the fate of many South Vietnamese refugees after the fall of Saigon. In sum, if you liked or loved documentary, I highly recommend this book.
4 people found this helpful
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- Princeps P
- 06-28-18
Good until late chapters
I found the listen to be very detailed with information from both sides of the conflict. I was looking for a good book on the Vietnam war, neither pro or con, just the facts. However, around chapter ten author becomes very preachy and makes it known he was anti-war and the tone became very biased. First 27 hours were very informative, last few hours became a Sunday service.
12 people found this helpful
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- dave warren
- 03-10-19
Best Ever !
Best book on the Vietnam war I've read and I've read 30+. Well written and narrated. Definitely recommend it.
3 people found this helpful
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- Brian Abel Ragen
- 10-19-17
An Excellent Extension of the TV Series
There is much that is hard to bear in this book, but I can’t think of anything that did not seem to need to be said or that was put in a way
that seemed unfair to me. I wish American presidents didn’t come off so badly—but it is their own words that convict them. There are, on the other hand, many moments that move one to admiration for those who did what they saw as their duty. This is a just and compassionate book. It it also very well read. I am glad no attempt was made to introduce the sounds and music that help make the film so powerful. Watch the film for that. This book will give a fuller, more detailed view.
5 people found this helpful
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- Salon Adelle
- 09-12-17
HANDS DOWN BEST BOOK
Wow, I'm blown away. I listened to this 30 hour book in 4 days. It is insane. The amount of lies, corruption, deceit, loss of honor that our leaders had is hard to listen to. There is so much information provided in this book. I though I knew a lot about the Vietnam war. I DID NOT! Buy this book now!
5 people found this helpful
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- Kevin Warren
- 10-26-17
The usual Vietnam info delivered in the old prose
I've listened to and read many, many books on Vietnam and if you've done the same you'll likely not get many interesting new nuggets out of this book.
I also have to mention that there is a one-sidedness to this book that at times makes me visualize Burns posing right along side Jane Fonda or waiving his own NLF flag while marching down Pennsylvania Ave. When speaking of protestors and violence in the US it was common of him to say that protestors "occupied" buildings but when the construction workers took over buildings they "invaded" them. Many times the words of events were not his own but were borrowed from others but the selection of those stories was at times curious. For example, he seemed to like to advance the theory that the reason people were so mad at Jane Fonda was not as much what she said and/or where she said it but more that she was so desirable at the time her betrayal or treason was that much more pronounced. I would say that the amount of outrage any celebrity generates tends to be in proportion to his popularity and the outrageousness of his actions or statements.
As the book goes on we see things like My Lai being referred to, appropriately, as a "Massacre" but for whatever bizarre reason the massacre at Hue was (borrowing a term, again), a "stain on the rebellion." When speaking of the killing of 100 civilians by the NVA at a prayer service in An Loc he told it with a degree of flatness that would've impressed McNamara but any time the US soldiers did something it was brutal, merciless, horrific, etc. Any US action received plenty of adjectives. I certainly have no problem with speaking of the horrors of war by both sides and on equal terms as it is important to paint it as horribly as it was. One certainly appreciates that in the context of discussing the political evolution of the war back home specific US actions of war are in fact relevant but the specifics of the words that are chosen and the language that is used is terribly asymmetric.
The author's passions start to become apparent at the end when speaking of the protestors and the peace movement and he abandons any degree of objectivity at this point, though I found it amusing he worked hard to separate himself from the Weathermen.
I wanted to listen to this audiobook before watching the PBS special but now I don't think I want to watch the PBS show. Also, I take back anything bad I said about Sheehan and Halberstam. Their works stand like beacons of examples of centered analyses by comparison.
30 people found this helpful
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- Grandparents
- 09-07-17
Provacitive, compelling and often disturbing
For many who believed the Vietnam war was to contain communism this will find this a disturbing story. Hidden whitehouse doubts of four Presidents, tensions at home and abroad, unstable leadership, nuclear brinkmanship, “The Vietnam War” presents a divided USA too ready to employ the military without an end game.
9 people found this helpful
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- Mr. Alan R. Jenkins
- 11-01-17
audio book better than documentary film
fantastic insight into the Vietnam War from begins to final collapse with both sides of the story told in great detail with personal stories of participants and those who were there but necessarily involved in the conflict. The audio book is in my opinion better than the film documentary which also watched - the book deals with more detail; however, I would recommend that both versions be considered as you can see visually what much of the audio content is describing.
Factual, unbiased, and certainly the most accurate account I have yet to come across on the War; and explains where mistakes were made on both the French, American and Vietnamese sides; and how the peace movement influenced the final outcome; and the book ultimately explains the tragedy that befell the South on the communist take-over with its unimaginable human and economic cost.
Five stars = must listen to.
7 people found this helpful
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- Tony
- 10-01-17
Stunning account of Vietnam War
This is a must listen account of the Vietnam War told through the people who made and experienced it. The complexities of its beginning are clearly explained and the futility of the military actions revealed. However the it's the interweaving of secret records, personal accounts, verbatim conversations
4 people found this helpful
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- Liam_H
- 01-15-20
A complicated tragedy
Don't be daunted by the 31hr length. An excellent read, especially if you have already seen the documentary films from 2017 on BBC 4. the added essays help to put more context to the complicated tragedy of the Vietnam wars.
2 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 08-11-21
Good information on Vietnam war
Very long listening but good book bit one sided book I think that more on north Vietnam would good.
1 person found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 07-06-20
brilliant
the narration was fantastic I was totally gripped, a story told with total impartiality.
thoroughly reccomend
1 person found this helpful
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- Gary Wright
- 05-28-20
Absolutely Recommend
This book had exactly the level of detail and insight I was searching. It gave me a true understand of what lead up to, and took place during the Vietnam War.
1 person found this helpful
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- C.Lawler
- 07-19-18
A moving and eye opening exploration
As someone who didn't really know much about the Vietnam war, I found this book insightful and poignant. Using different points of view, from both sides, the book takes you on a journey through the Vietnam War, the reasons behind it, the action on the ground and it's end. I found the use of first hand accounts from both sides really moving, bringing to life the impact of the war on the people involved. The narration is excellent. Highly recommend.
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- Asido
- 05-16-22
Thoroughly enjoyable
I found this book detailed but not overwhelming. The delicate interplay between historical events and personal experiences is very absorbing. It breathes life
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- Anonymous User
- 04-11-22
Immense
I don't mind admitting there were times i shed a tear or two.Great narration and all involved deserve great credit.As a Brit who has always had an interest in the Vietnam war i can't think of anything that is as balanced as this audio/book/tv.😢❤✌
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- Shane canning
- 02-02-22
amazing listen
best audio book i have ever listened too brave men everywhere amerians and vietnams
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- Anonymous User
- 02-19-19
Wow
Just wow... I don't know what else to say but need 15 words. listen to this
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- Craig
- 10-08-17
A lesson in History
I very much enjoyed listening to this book. I learnt a great deal about the war itself and the frailities ans selfishness of those in power. As an Australian I would have liked to hear a little of the role of Australians, Koreans and New Zealanders in the war - but that is only a minor criiticism. Thanks for producing this.
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- Luke
- 03-22-22
Excellent
Gives an even view from both sides, it does not celebrate American firepower and mass murder like other titles do
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- Alison
- 05-14-21
absolutely sensational
A brilliant production. Enlightening, insightful, confronting, disturbing and thoroughly thought provoking.
Asks, opens and explores many hard and difficult questions but let's the listener decide on the answers. The personal stories, recollections and reflections are priceless.
I was spellbound, listened to the whole book twice and will listen again. Simply brilliant.
For those interested in the Vietnam war and it's history this book is recommended.
To the authors... Very well done.
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- Anonymous User
- 05-03-21
Outstanding
Loved it from start to finish.
Exceptionally comprehensive, performed very well and presented in an unbiased manner. Highly recommend.
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- Anonymous User
- 03-04-21
Great book A+
I recommend this book to anyone seeking an overall understanding of the Vietnam war from the American & Vietnamese perspective. Written well with detailed accounts.
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- Anonymous User
- 10-20-18
I know so much more about the Vietnam War now
I came in as a beginner and left feeling I know a ton about the war. Detailed, well organised and fascinating
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- aidan
- 12-05-17
Amazing
This book is amazing I hate Flanders I hate Flanders I hate Flanders I hate Flanders I hate Flanders
1 person found this helpful