Download Delcorso's Gallery, Philip Caputo, Random House LLC, 2012
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DelCorso's Gallery, Philip Caputo, Random House LLC, 2012, 0307822052, 9780307822055, 368 pages. A classic novel of Vietnam and its aftermath from Philip Caputo, whose Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir A Rumor of War is widely considered among the best ever written about the experience of war.At thirty-three, Nick DelCorso is an award-winning war photographer who has seen action and dodged bullets all over the world–most notably in Vietnam, where he served as an Army photographer and recorded combat scenes whose horrors have not yet faded in his memory. When he is called back to Vietnam on assignment during a North Vietnamese attempt to take Saigon, he is faced with a defining choice: should he honor the commitment he has made to his wife not to place himself in any more danger for the sake of his career, or follow his ambition back to the war-torn land that still haunts his dreams? What follows is a riveting story of war on two fronts, Saigon and Beirut, that will test DelCorso’s faith not only in himself, but in the nobler instincts of men.. DOWNLOAD http://bit.ly/1j0zXiV Acts of Faith , Philip Caputo, May 3, 2005, Fiction, 669 pages. Philip Caputo’s tragic and epically ambitious new novel is set in Sudan, where war is a permanent condition. Into this desolate theater come aid workers, missionaries, and .... Dispatches , Michael Herr, 2009, History, 247 pages. Written on the front lines in Vietnam, "Dispatches" became an immediate classic of war reportage when it was published in 1977. Herr's unsparing, unorthodox retellings of the .... WORSHIP THE WIND , Mitchell Caine, Jun 12, 1979, Fiction, 442 pages. Shades of Simon Gray , Joyce McDonald, May 16, 2012, Juvenile Fiction, 272 pages. Simon Gray is the ideal teenager вЂ― smart, reliable, hardworking, trustworthy. Or is he? After Simon crashes his car into The Liberty Tree, another portrait starts to emerge .... 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Boxare , Sten Erik Feinstein, 1997, , 314 pages. Creole Surgeon , Mitchell Caine, 1977, , 446 pages. At thirty-three, Nick DelCorso is an award-winning war photographer who has seen action and dodged bullets all over the world–most notably in Vietnam, where he served as an Army photographer and recorded combat scenes whose horrors have not yet faded in his memory. When he is called back to Vietnam on assignment during a North Vietnamese attempt to take Saigon, he is faced with a defining choice: should he honor the commitment he has made to his wife not to place himself in any more danger for the sake of his career, or follow his ambition back to the war-torn land that still haunts his dreams? What follows is a riveting story of war on two fronts, Saigon and Beirut, that will test DelCorso’s faith not only in himself, but in the nobler instincts of men. It is somewhat hard to describe this book in a few sentences. Even though mostly fiction, the main character plays an uncanny resemblance to the author himself. Something that is especially noticeable if you ever read Caputo's Autobiography "Means of Escape." The picture this book paints of Beirut is frighteningly realistic, something that even non-fiction books written about the War fail to achieve. Likewise, the portrayal of a photojournalist, one who is asked to risk his life "to beat AP by 5 min." is superb by any account. Anyone who is familiar with Caputo's literary work knows how good this man is at molding and developing complex, intelligent, and memorable characters. Delcorso's Gallery is a prime example of this. I urge anyone who at the least is curious about what happened in Beirut to read this novel in addition to the history books out there. I do not know if history will repeat itself somewhere else in the future, but it is important to be aware. just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed reading your books. I read Rumor of War about 10 years ago and I think I may have re-read it about 50 times since then. I lost my father there (never knew him). I think your book is the best I’ve ever read about the Vietnam war, and I’ve read a lot of them. Not glamorizing it or making yourself out to be more than you were… Nicholas DelCorso, a Vietnam veteran turned combat photographer, wants to show the public the true face of war. It has become an obsession with him, an attempted expiation of a momentary sin of callousness, a crusade that seems inexplicable and tasteless to P. X. Dunlop, his former mentor. Dunlop has won Pulitzer Prizes for his artful portraits of dignity and sacrifice on the battlefield, but he is having trouble finding either in the squalid collapse of South Vietnam or in Beirut during the Lebanese civil war. With bemused revulsion, he watches DelCorso photographing mangled corpses. Their rivalry, the emotional center of this book, reaches its climax in Beirut, a place so awful that even the professional action junkies, the war correspondents, have difficulty sustaining their macho existential pose. In one particularly haunting scene, Dunlop watches two Christian Maronite gunmen attempting to pick off a Moslem sniper on a balcony; the ''sniper'' turns out to be a woman taking her clothes off the line. Of course, they kill her anyway; she is Moslem. Mr. Caputo writes with all the subtlety of a punch to the gut, but his descriptions of combat photographers and correspondents at work are right on the money. Like his hero, though, the author seems far more comfortable in ravaged Beirut than in the putatively civilized professional world of New York. His attempt to describe DelCorso's marriage to a cool Irish- American aristocrat isn't nearly so compelling as the battle sequences. Mr. Caputo remains very much a Marine - a bit awkward when it comes to domesticity and philosophizing but a tiger in the field. Joe Klein is the author of Woody Guthrie: A life. I loved the book. I recommend it highly. And Caputo's insights on this business that he builds into the development of the plot made me think, "This is just a little too bizarre to be made up or derived from interviews of those who were there." After a little internet research on Phil Caputo, I learned this is a narrative of what was basically his real life as a former soldier turned war correspondent. And led me to read his other 2 books. Philip Caputo worked for nine years for the Chicago Tribune and shared a Pulitzer Prize in 1972 for his reporting on election fraud in Chicago. He is the author of seven other works of fiction and two memoirs, including A Rumor of War, about his service in Vietnam, and four works of nonfiction. He divides his time between Connecticut and Arizona. American arms ARVN asked bang-bang Beirut Bolton bullshit camera Cho Lon Christ Christians Conklin crazy Dalman damned Danny Deecee DelCorso desk door Dunlop eyes face feel felt fighting film fire fucking goddamned Goddamnit going Grey guys Haddad hand head hear heard helicopter hell Hoang kataeb killed knew Leica lens light looked Looney Tunes Lutter Maggie Margaret marine McCafferty McQueen minutes Moslems moved Newsweek Nhut Nick North Vietnamese Okay Percodans Phalangists Phoenicia photograph picture pulled Raymond rifle rocket roof Saigon Sami sense shell shirt shit shoot shot shoulder shutter smell smoke snapped sniper soldier sound Steve McQueen stood story street sweat talk tape teletype tell thing thought took trying turned Viet Viet Cong Vietnam voice wait walked wall water buffalo What's Wilson window wire woman Xuan Loc Yeah Book Description: Sphere, London, 1985. Paperback. Book Condition: Very Good.