

Sometimes the best way to understand a complex, extended event (a war, a historical era, etc.) is to narrow the focus to a particular event or person or place. This book began its life as a New Yorker article in 1967, a contemporaneous account of the author's (then a 24-year-old traveling through East Asia) observations of the Army's destruction of Ben Suc and the relocation of its inhabitants. Felt alive in a way that few academic histories do.
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