“IT IS AN UNWRITTEN RULE OF THE BATTLEFIELD THAT THE BEST CHANCE FOR ESCAPE LIES IN THE FIRST FEW DAYS AFTER CAPTURE”: CHILLING ACCOUNT OF “BUD” DAY’S EVENTUAL ESCAPE FROM HIS VIETNAMESE CAPTORS, INSCRIBED
(VIETNAM CONFLICT) DAY, George E. Return with Honor. Mesa, Arizona: Champlin Museum Press, (1989). Octavo, original blue cloth gilt, original dust jacket.
First edition of this personal account of the “triumph and survival of the human spirit under inhumane and brutal conditions during the Vietnam War,” inscribed, “2-24-’92. To Judge Richard Kennedy— a favorite relative of Bob Fleet! Best regards, Col. Bud Day, MOH, AFC.”
“The concept of undeclared war for the United States is a failure, and permits our internal and external enemies to destroy us from within, as they did from 1965-75, by dividing us and setting our people against one another… If war had been declared, unity would have prevailed. Our country’s enormous military power could then have yielded victory; quickly, effectively and with finality.” This is the agonizing story of “one man’s tribulation about his capture, escape, recapture and incarceration,… the story of America’s most decorated military hero since General Douglas MacArthur.”
Book and inscription fine, front flap of original dust jacket excised. A very desirable inscribed copy.