‘The best book I have ever read on men and war in our time’ John Le Carré Michael Herr went to Vietnam as a war correspondent for Esquire. He returned to tell the real story in all its hallucinatory madness and brutality, cutting to the quick of the conflict and its seductive, devastating impact on a generation of young men. His unflinching account is haunting in its violence, but even more so in its honesty. First published in 1977, Dispatches was a revolutionary piece of new journalism that evoked the experiences of soldiers in Vietnam and has forever shaped our understanding of the conflict. A groundbreaking piece of journalism which inspired Stanley Kubrick’s classic Vietnam War film Full Metal Jacket.
Review
The best book I have ever read on men and war in our time. -- John Le Carré
Having read Dispatches, it is difficult to convey the impact of total experience as all the facades of patriotism, heroism and the whole colossal fraud of American intervention fall away to the bare bones of fear, war and death -- William S. Burroughs
Splendid . . . he brings alive the terror of combat in a way that rivals All Quiet on the Western Front -- Tom Wolfe
In the great line of Crane, Orwell and Hemingway . . . he seems to have brought to this book the ear of a musician and the eye of a painter, Frank Zappa and Francis Bacon - The Washington Post
We have all spent ten years trying to explain what happened to our heads and our lives in the decade we finally survived - but Michael Herr's Dispatches puts all the rest of us in the shade -- Hunter S. Thompson
If it were only unconventional journalism, it would stand with the best there is - but it's a good deal more than that . . . I believe it may be the best person