In Pharaoh's Army is Tobias Wolff's unflinching account of his tour in
Vietnam, his tangled journey there and back. Using his old wiles and
talents, he passes through boot camp, trains as a paratrooper,
volunteers for the Special Forces, studies Vietnamese, and - without
really believing it himself - becomes an officer in the U.S. Army. Then,
inexorably, he finds himself drawn into the war, sent to the Mekong
Delta as adviser to a Vietnamese battalion. More or less innocent,
self-deluded but rapidly growing less so, he dedicates himself not to
victory but to survival. For despite his impressive credentials, he
recognizes in himself laughably little aptitude for the military life
and no taste at all for the war. He ricochets between boredom and terror
and grief for lost friends; then and in the years to come, he reckons
the cost of staying alive. A superb memoir of war, In Pharaoh's Army is
an intimate recounting of the central event of our recent past. Once
again Tobias Wolff has combined the art of the best fiction and the
immediacy of personal history - with authority, humanity, and sure
conviction.