Perhaps the most accurate story of LRRPs at war
ever to appear in print!
When Frank Johnson arrived in Vietnam in 1969, he was nineteen, a young
soldier untested in combat like thousands of others--but with two
important differences: Johnson volunteered for the elite L Company
Rangers of the 101st Airborne Division, a long range reconnaissance
patrol (LRRP) unit, and he kept a secret diary, a practice forbidden by
the military to protect the security of LRRP operations.
Now, more than three decades later, those hastily written pages offer a
rare look at the daily operations of one of the most courageous units
that waged war in Vietnam. Johnson served in I Corps, in northern
Vietnam, where combat was furious and the events he recounts emerge,
stark and compelling: walking point in the A Shau Valley, braving enemy
fire to rescue a downed comrade, surviving days and nights of relentless
tension that suddenly exploded in the blinding fury of an NVA attack.
Undimmed and unmuddied by the passing of years, Johnson's account is
unique in the annals of Vietnam literature. Moreover, it is a timeless
testimony to the sacrifice and heroism of the LRRPs who dared to risk it
all.