
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Vietnam from a Texas Point
of View
LITERATURE OF THE WAR: MEMOIRS, POETRY, AND FICTION:
Darrell Bain. MEDICS WILD. (2001) A "humorous"
Vietnam novel by a veteran from East Texas and author of numerous
science fiction novels.
Roy Benavidez. The Three Wars of Roy Benavidez (1998)
and Medal of Honor. (1995) Memoirs by the Congressional
Medal of Honor winner from South Texas.
William Broyles, Jr. Brothers in Arms. (1986) Account
by a former Marine Lieutenant and founding Texas Monthly
editor who returned to Vietnam in the early 1980s. Reprinted
in 1996 by the University of Texas Press as part of its Southwestern
Writers Collection Book Series.
Tom Campbell. The Old Man's Trail. (1995) An action
novel about the Vietcong by a Dallas native and long-time Marine
officer.
Daniel Cano Shifting Loyalties. (1995) Glimpses of
Mexican Americans from Texas in this sweeping novel that follows
the lives of five young Chicanos before, during, and after the
Vietnam War.
Charles H. Coleman. Sergeant Back Again (1980) An ironic
Vietnam-tinged novel set in the psychiatric ward of the Brooke
Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio.
James Crumley. One to Count Cadence. (1969) This debut
novel by the South Texas native and world-class detective novelist
is considered a modern classic of war literature.
Terry Farish. Flower Shadows. (1992) A novel about
a young woman from Texas sent to run Red Cross mobile recreation
units in Vietnam.
Marshall Harrison. Cadillac Flight (1991) and The Delta.
(1992) Adventure novel written by a Texan who served three terms
in Vietnam as an Air Force officer. Author was raised in Dallas
and currently resides in Lubbock.
Layne Heath. CW2 (1990) and Blue Deep. (1993)
Adventure novels by a Texan who served two tours as a helicopter
pilot in Vietnam.
John H. Irsfeld. Radio Elvis and Other Stories. (2002)
Includes stories about Vietnam drawn from the life experience
of this Mineral Wells, Texas native.
Andrew Jolly. A Time of Soldiers (1976) Epic novel
follows a Texas family of soldiers from the Mexican Revolution
through the Vietnam War.
John P. McAfee: Slow Walk in a Sad Rain (2002) and
On Rims of Empty Moons. (1997) Critically-acclaimed "black
comedies" by a Texas native who served as a Green Beret
captain in Vietnam.
Walter McDonald. A Band of Brothers: Stories from Vietnam
(1989) McDonald is a former Air Force pilot and Vietnam veteran
who has been Texas' Poet Laureate and Director of the Creative
Writing program at Texas Tech University.
Walter McDonald. His award-winning poetry collections include:
After the Noise of Saigon, Night Landings, The Flying Dutchman,
Caliban in Blue.
Joe D. Rodríguez. Oddsplayer (1989). Memories
of racism in Texas fuel this author's account of his experiences
in Vietnam.
Michael W. Rodriguez. Humidity Moon: Short Stories of the
Vietnam War. (1998) Nuanced, emotionally-charged portraits
of a Marine "grunt" in Vietnam.
James N. Rowe. Five Years to Freedom. (1971) Memoir
of a Texas Green Beret Lieutenant who was captured by the Viet
Cong in 1963 and eventually escaped. Rowe returned to the U.S.
and became active in pro-war efforts.
Joanna Scott. Charlie and the Children. (1997) A Texas
POW gradually loses his grip on reality and comes to believe
that one of his captors is his lost son.
Estela Portillo Trambley "Village," in Rain of
Scorpions and Other Stories. (1993) Rico, a young Chicano
in Vietnam, rebels when he realizes that a Viet Cong village
his unit is about to attack is "no different than Valverde,
the barrio where he had grown up."
Charley Trujillo. Soldados: Chicanos in Viet Nam. (1990)
Accounts of Mexican American veterans, including some from Texas.
Diego Vazquez, Jr. Growing Through the Ugly. (1997)
Recounts the life of a young Chicano soldier from El Paso who
is killed in Vietnam-from the point of view of the dead soldier.
JOURNALISTIC ENCOUNTERS: THE WAR CORRESPONDENTS
Gordon Baxter. 13/13 Vietnam: Search & Destroy.
(1967) A photographic essay by a well-known Texas journalist
of the time and a self-described "right winger."
Randy Lee Eickhoff. A Hand to Execute. (1987) Adventure
novel by a Vietnam veteran from El Paso that features a jaded
newspaperman in Saigon.
Robert Flynn. A Personal War in Vietnam. (1989) A clear-eyed
chronicle by a Korean War veteran who journeyed to Vietnam in
1970 as a college professor-turned-war correspondent.
Robert Flynn. The Last Klick. (1994) Flynn's earlier
reportage in Vietnam formed the basis for this novel. Flynn's
short story collection Living with the Hyenas (1995) also
contains portraits of Vietnam.
Harold G. Moore and Joseph L. Galloway. We were Soldiers
Once...And Young (1992) Account of the first major combat
between U.S. soldiers and the Viet Cong. Joseph Galloway, a Refugio,
Texas native, was the only journalist on the scene.
Bud Shrake. Night Never Falls. (1987) Novel about a
swashbuckling newspaperman who finds himself trapped with the
French at Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
The HOMEFRONT: TEXANS RESPOND TO THE WAR:
Aztlán and Vietnam: Chicano and Chicana Experiences
of the War. Edited by George Mariscal. (1999) contains works
by Texas writers including: Magdaleno Avila (Juan Valdez), Gregg
Barrios, Barbara Renaud González, Rolando Hinojosa, Michael
W. Rodriguez, Carmen Tafolla, Tino Villanueva
Sarah Bird. The Yokota Officer's Club. (2001) Acclaimed
novel from the Austin resident told from the point of view of
an anti-war military brat stationed overseas with her family
during the Vietnam War.
Mark Busby. Fort Benning Blues. (2001) An ambivalent
Texan draftee undergoes officer training while news of the My
Lai massacre comes to light and anti-war sentiment erupts.
Norma Elia Cantú. Canícula: Snapshots of
a Girlhood en la Frontera. (1995) Memoir from the Laredo
writer that describes growing up with her brother, Tino, and
his eventual death in Vietnam.
Al Dewlen. Next of Kin (1977) Novel based on the personal
experience of this noted Texas author-who lost his only son in
Vietnam.
Cecilio García-Camarillo. Selected Poetry. (2000)
Chicano poet from Laredo who decried "the gringo's war in
Vietnam" in his verse.
R.S. Gwynn. "Body Bags." In Texas Poets in Concert:
A Quartet. (1990) Effects of the Vietnam War on the poet's
childhood acquaintances.
.
William Humphrey. The Horse Latitudes. Unpublished anti-war
novel by this noted Texas writer, who participated in the 1971
march on the Pentagon to protest the Vietnam war.
Daryl Janes (ed.) No Apologies: Texas Radicals Celebrate
the '60s. (1992) Accounts of Texans who protested against
the war.
Suzan-Lori Parks. Getting Mother's Body. (2003) This
first novel by the Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist is set in
West Texas in the 1960s. Lori-Parks herself lived in West Texas
while her father was serving in Vietnam.
Norman Mailer. Why Are We in Vietnam? (1967) This parable
about violence-prone Texas hunters by one of America's leading
literary figures places the blame for Vietnam on "Texan"
attitudes.
Howard McCord. Ovens: Poems against the War and Tyranny
(1971). This poet from El Paso served in the US Navy from 1951
to 1953 and later voiced his opposition to Vietnam in his work.
Reginald McKnight. The Kind of Light That Shines on Texas:
Stories. (1992) A fiercely memorable portrait of Texas racism-from
the point of view of an African-American elementary student whose
father is serving in Vietnam.
Larry McMurtry. Moving On (1970) The Vietnam War and
the counterculture it spawned hover behind the Texans in this
novel.
Paul Scott Malone. Memorial Day and Other Stories.
(2000) Vietnam-laced short stories, set in Texas.
Robert Pardun. Prairie Radical: A Journey Through the Sixties.
(2001) Memoir of an Austin-based anti-war activist.
LEGACIES: Vietnamese in Texas and Vietnam Veterans in Texas
Fiction
Austin Bay. The Coyote Cried Twice. (1985) Mystery
novel set in the brush country of South Texas with a Vietnam
vet protagonist.
Patt Carr. Bluebirds (in Careless Weeds: Six Texas
Novellas, edited by Tom Pilkington, 1993) Texas woman married
to a troubled Vietnam veteran.
Sue Chance. Stoneflowers (1994) A West Texas sculptor
and a Vietnam veteran learn to help each other cope with their
separate sufferings.
James Crumley. Bordersnakes (1996) The Mexican Tree
Duck. (1993) Vietnam vet C.W. Sughrue stars in this series
from the internationally-acclaimed crime novelist from Texas.
Mary Gardner. Boat people. (1995) A novel focusing
on the newly-arrived Vietnamese community along the Texas Gulf
Coast.
Gaylord Dold. Bay of Sorrows. (1995.) Tension between
Vietnamese immigrants and Texans boil over in this mystery novel.
Genaro Gonzalez. "Home of the Brave," in Only
Sons. (1991) A wounded Vietnam veteran returns to South Texas
in this short story. A Vietnam veteran also makes an appearance
in Gonzalez's novel Rainbow's End. (1989)
A.C. Greene. "Like," in The Highland Park Woman.
(1983) A lonely, alienated Texas Vietnam veteran reflects on
women in this short story.
Ken Grissom. Drop-Off. (1988) A Galveston-based Vietnam
veteran stars in this mystery series.
William Hauptman. The Storm Season. (1992) A thoughtful
Vietnam vet befriends a North Texas storm chaser in this novel.
Reprinted in 2001 by the University of Texas Press as part of
its Southwestern Writers Collection Book Series.
Joe Lansdale. The Two-Bear Mambo (1995) A gay black
Vietnam veteran teams up with a white heterosexual buddy to solve
crimes in the Piney Woods.
James McLure. Lone Star. (in Texas Plays, edited
by William B. Martin, 1990) A veteran has difficulty adjusting
to life in his hometown following the war.
Charlie McDade. The Gulf (1986) Recently-arrived Vietnamese
refugees tangle with hostile Texans while a local Vietnam veteran
comes to terms with his past.
Terry Pringle. Tycoon. (1990) A Texas Vietnam veteran
comes of age amidst the oil boom of the 1970s in this novel.
Rick Riordan. Cold Springs. (2003) A survivalist school
in Texas run by a Vietnam veteran is at the center of this mystery
by the Edgar Award-winning San Antonio mystery novelist.
Sandra Scofield. Beyond Observing. (1991) This novel
details the troubled relationship between a west Texas woman
and her Vietnam veteran husband.
Howard Swindle. Jitter Joint (1999) and Doin' Dirty.
(2000) Author is a Vietnam vet whose Dallas-based mystery novels
feature a veteran/alcoholic protagonist.
Lan Tran. "Lone Stars," in the Summer 2002 issue
of the Chattahoocee Review. Essay about a Vietnamese-Texan
upbringing in the 1970s by the performance artist and creator
of the one-woman show, "How to Unravel Your Family."
Robert James Waller. Border Music. (1995) A Texas Vietnam
veteran rescues a Minnesota stripper and takes her to his ranch.
Mary Willis Walker. Under the Beetle's Cellar. (1995)
A Vietnam vet becomes an unlikely hero as schoolchildren are
held hostage by an apocalyptic cult.
Thomas Zigal. "Orphan of the West," in South
by Southwest: 24 Stories from Modern Texas, edited by Don
Graham (1986). A Vietnamese orphan is adopted by a cowboy movie
star who has retired to Texas.
TELEVISION AND FILM:
Alamo Bay (1985) Louis Malle film focuses on a Vietnam
veteran angered by Vietnamese immigrants moving into the fishing
industry in a Texas Gulf Coast town.
China Beach (1988-1991) Emmy Award-winning television
series created by William Broyles Jr. and John Sacret Young focuses
on the experiences of women in Vietnam.
Fandango (1985) The Vietnam War looms as five UT-Austin
students embark on a final road trip across the Mexican Border.
Kevin Costner stars.
Little Boy Blue (1997) Vietnam vet heads a dysfunctional
family in the rural Texas panhandle.
Phantom Soldiers (1987) A Texas Ranger goes to Vietnam
to find his MIA brother.
Tender Mercies (1983) Alchoholic former country singer
makes friends with a young widow whose husband was killed in
Vietnam. Robert Duvall won an Oscar for Best Actor and Horton
Foote won for Best Screenplay
Vietnam, Texas (1990) Clashes in the Texas fishing
industry between newly arrived Vietnamese immigrants and more
established Texans are central to this gritty drama.
The War at Home (1996) Emilio Estevez directs and stars
in this movie about a shell-shocked Vietnam veteran who returns
to Texas. Filmed in San Marcos and Austin.
We Were Soldiers (2002) This film starring Mel Gibson
is based on the book by Harold G. Moore and Joseph L. Galloway
(see above)
This bibliography was prepared by Steve Davis, Assistant Curator
of the Southwestern Writers Collection, along with Dr. Mark Busby,
Director of the Southwest Regional Humanities Center at Texas
State University-San Marcos. We welcome additons and corrections.
Please send updates to Steve
Davis
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