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text 2020-07-23 19:29
A collection of rants about the Vietnam War
The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Vietnam War - Phillip Jennings

The “Politically Incorrect Guides” were a thing in the early 2000s – a right-wing variation on the “For Dummies” media brand of instructional guides that was designed to provide an ideologically correct spin on their subjects. A little under two dozen of them were produced on various historical and hot-button topics, most of them bravely railing against various straw men in an effort to show why the right’s interpretation of events was always the correct one.

 

Philip Jennings’s contribution on the Vietnam War is a representative example of the series. The bullet points on the cover make a series of daring claims, such as that 1) contrary to what you may have heard, the U.S. actually won the Vietnam War, only for that victory to be undermined by liberal congressmen, 2) contrary to the popular view that body counts were gross exaggerations, the U.S. killed more of the enemy than they gave themselves credit for, 3) Ho Chi Minh was not a nationalist but a “hard core Communist,” and so on. Take that, conventional wisdom!

 

Such bold assertions call for extensive documentation to support them, and if one were to go by his bibliography Jennings has indeed read widely on the conflict. Most of his chapters, though, are grounded in a very narrow selection of works from that bibliography, favoring heavily the ones that support his antagonistic viewpoints and ignoring any pesky details that run counter to them. This happens from the start, when he stresses the benevolent aspects of French colonial rule and ignores the brutal methods they employed over the decades to maintain their control. In Jennings’s view, the Vietnamese never had it so good as they did when the French were in charge.

 

But if that were true, then why did the Vietnamese rebel? Enter the sinister figure of Ho Chi Minh, the bète noire of Jennings’s tale. Jennings never misses an opportunity to denigrate Ho, taking particular delight in mocking his early job as a pastry chef, even claiming that he was trained by the famous chef Auguste Escoffier. That there is no evidence that Ho ever trained under Escoffier highlights another problem with Jennings’s book, which is that he never allows the absence of evidence to get in the way of a snide point. Nor does he provide much in the way of detail; the anti-colonial war against the French becomes something that just happens, though Jennings is sure that the Communists are to blame somehow.

 

Jennings is particularly determined to play up Ho’s Communist bona fides as a way of justifying America’s intervention in Vietnam. This meant supporting Ngo Dinh Diem, the leader of the newly-created South Vietnam and the hero of Jennings’s version of Vietnamese history. Whereas Jennings’s accepts any derogatory detail about Ho no matter how spurious his portrait of Diem goes to great lengths to defend him by excusing his authoritarian government (Diem’s pro-Catholic bias goes unmentioned, his rigging of his own election is presented as a necessary show of strength, and his persecution of Buddhists is treated as a clash against a militant fringe) and arguing that his regime was far more successful than it was credited. Nevertheless, Diem’s removal in a coup, in Jennings’s estimation, removed the one true national leader in South Vietnam, thus necessitating American intervention.

 

What follows is a highly selective narrative of American involvement in the war, one focused mainly on the various air campaigns launched against the North Vietnamese. Absent from his book are the daily patrols that made up such a large part of military activity for American soldiers, along with the difficulties they encountered. Instead Jennings spends pages excoriating the various opponents of the war, as everyone from liberal Democrats to the media serve as targets for his ire. For the most part it’s less pointed criticism than it is irate venting that can’t cover up the hollowness of many of his arguments. As for the evidence that the U.S. won the war, Jennings refers to that discredited metric of the body count, arguing that all the U.S. needed to do after Nixon withdrew American forces (because the U.S. had killed so many Communists, right?) was to keep supplying air and naval support and South Vietnam would be with us today.

 

All of this makes for a book that is less a primer on the war than a collection of assorted rants about it. Even at its modest size it feels padded with superfluous material, from potted reviews of books and movies about the war to an "interview" with two characters from a novel Jennings wrote that may well be the most insular exchange ever printed. It all makes for a lousy work that fails in its goal by its very cheapness – if there is an argument to be made for the Vietnam War as a secret success, Jennings fails to make it in his tendentious and partisan text.

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review 2020-03-10 20:57
The Secret Commonwealth
The Secret Commonwealth - Philip Pullman

No. Just a thousand times no. This was long, boring, and there's a really weird set-up with two characters that I would rather Pullman just leave the hell alone. This dragged. Badly. I didn't like Lyra and I didn't like Pan. I just felt like this was filler and it ended on a weird note. 

 

No. 

 

Also can you call this Young Adult anymore since Lyra is not a young adult? She's 20 which puts her in New Adult status regarding book genres. Apparently my streak of disliking mostly every New Adult book I have read is undefeated.

No.

 

"The Secret Commonwealth" jumps forward and instead of following book #1 in the new series, we are plunged several years after Lyra and Will were separated. Lyra and Pan are finding themselves at odds and there's a mysterious murder that once again Lyra is in the middle of. We have previous characters from the last book (Malcolm and Alice) in this one to not do much besides fret over Lyra and or get shuttled off screen until Pullman remembers them. 

 

There's too much going on. I think we had to follow at one point 4 or 5 people? That includes Lyra, Pan, Malcolm, Alice, and others I am blanking on now. I think the worst part is as I said I didn't like Lyra or Pan.

 

Pullman turns Lyra into a freaking Mary Sue. Everyone wants to protect her and or is in love with her. I just...deep breath. I don't know what this was. It was a hodge podge of ideas that don't work. I don't know when book #3 is coming out, but I hope that Pullman gets rid of the characters we don't care about and focus on Lyra. The mess with her and Pan made zero sense and it got so stupid I couldn't even keep reading about it.

 

I started skimming over Malcolm's parts. I don't like him.


Alice felt the same but older between books #1 and #2 and I would have rather followed her.

 

The writing didn't read like Pullman and the flow was awful. There are stories within stories and info dumping galore. 


The book ends on a damn cliffhanger. 

 

Also, see spoiler below. 

 

 

The Malcolm and Lyra romance is gross and awful. I just cannot. 

 

(spoiler show)
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review 2019-09-20 21:53
Adventure Time Comics Vol. 3 - Phillip K... Adventure Time Comics Vol. 3 - Phillip Kennedy Johnson,Pendleton Ward,Jorge Corona,Tony Sandoval
For more reviews, check out my blog: Craft-Cycle

Another butt-kicking installment in the Adventure Time Comics series. This is a great series for Adventure Time fans and there is something in it for everyone. As with the previous books, there is a nice variety in the art styles, writing, and stories.

Some of my favorites in this collection were Rii Abrego's "Bad Radishes", Christine Larsen's "Third Eye", Jarrett Williams's "Princess Rap Battle", and Grace Kraft's "Chef BMO".

Fun books with original stories and great artwork. I am really enjoying this series so far.
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review 2019-08-22 07:10
Release Blitz - Phillip
 
Phillip by Cristin Harber is available now!
 
Amazon Universal — mybook.to/Phillip7Brides
Google Play — http://bit.ly/2YaIz2s
 
 
When Phillip Blackthorne secures his title as Harvard’s most mischievous co-ed with a prank that makes the campus newspaper, he also loses his first love and complete opposite, Ashley Catherine Cartwright. Twelve years later, another of Phillip’s stunts goes wrong when his runaway golf cart crashes through Ashley’s charity event on live TV. Their reunion goes viral—not only for the classic car he’s forced to donate, but the sparks that everyone but Ashley can see. Phillip is determined to win her heart again, but his shot at a second chance is doomed if Ashley refuses to see that life’s unexpected hurdles can be the best part of a happily ever after.
 
 
 
 

Phillip (7 Brides for 7 Blackthornes Book 4)Phillip by Cristin Harber
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is book #4, in the 7 Brides For 7 Blackthornes series. This book can be read as a standalone novel. For reader enjoyment, and to avoid spoilers, I recommend reading this series in order.

Ashley has grown up in her mother's shadow. Her mother always pushing her towards her belief in what should be the spotlight. Marry into the right family. Date the right man. Do not fall for an ex-boyfriend who has trouble being responsible. What if she wants to marry for love?

Phillip literally crashes an event Ashley is doing. Finding out his family has seen her regularly when he cannot even get over his broken heart..... it just guts him. The sparks fly whenever they are in the same room. He knows he has to take it slow to woo Ashley back into his life. How do you wait when your forever is right in front of you?

Such an amazing addition to this great series. This author is always a 1-click for me, and with this story she did not disappoint. Second-chance books can be tricky since I want them to be a realistic one as well. I loved the banter, the surprises, the heat, the pace - it just truly was a "let's turn the page and get to more" kind of read for me!


***This ARC copy was given in exchange for an honest review.


View all my reviews

 
 
 
 
 
 
Meet the Blackthorne men, each one as hot, fast, and smooth as the whisky that built the family fortune, and yachts and race cars that bear their name. From proud Scottish stock, Blackthornes never lose. But, one by one, the seven sexy men in this family are about to risk everything when they fall for strong and beautiful women who test their mettle in life…and love.Don’t miss these sexy, heartwarming, emotion-filled books by seven bestselling authors: Barbara Freethy, Julia London, Lynn Raye Harris, Cristin Harber, Roxanne St. Claire, Christie Ridgway and Samantha Chase.Check out every book in the series!
 
SIGN UP for new release alerts -- http://eepurl.com/dK4ldQ
 
FIND out more information --7brides.net
 
JOIN the Facebook Group -- http://bit.ly/7BridesGroup
 

ENTER the Giveaway! -- http://bit.ly/7BridesGiveaway

 

 

 
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
 
About the Author:
 
New York Times bestselling author Cristin Harber packs her military romance, romantic suspense, and new adult romance novels with steam, sizzle, and action of all types. Whether you want fireworks in the bedroom or a hunky ex military team that saves the day, her bestselling romance novels will make you swoon and smile. Her summer reading list is insanely long, but she always finds time to fall for new book boyfriends, and when she's not writing sexy love stories, Cristin is tinkering around her house, playing with the kids and dog, or trying out some new-and-absurd DIY project. Cristin's series include Titan, Delta, Only, and projects with Liliana Hart and 1001 Dark Nights, and with the 7 Brides for 7 Soldiers series along side of Barbara Freethy, Roxanne St. Claire, Christie Ridgway, Lynn Raye Harris, Julia London, and Samantha Chase.
 
Connect with Cristin!
 
 
 
 
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review 2019-08-22 02:37
Heartstopping
Phillip (7 Brides for 7 Blackthornes #4) - Cristin Harber

This is book #4, in the 7 Brides For 7 Blackthornes series.  This book can be read as a standalone novel.  For reader enjoyment, and to avoid spoilers, I recommend reading this series in order.

 

Ashley has grown up in her mother's shadow.  Her mother always pushing her towards her belief in what should be the spotlight.  Marry into the right family.  Date the right man.  Do not fall for an ex-boyfriend who has trouble being responsible.  What if she wants to marry for love?

 

Phillip literally crashes an event Ashley is doing.  Finding out his family has seen her regularly when he cannot even get over his broken heart..... it just guts him.  The sparks fly whenever they are in the same room.  He knows he has to take it slow to woo Ashley back into his life.  How do you wait when your forever is right in front of you?

 

Such an amazing addition to this great series.  This author is always a 1-click for me, and with this story she did not disappoint.  Second-chance books can be tricky since I want them to be a realistic one as well.  I loved the banter, the surprises, the heat, the pace - it just truly was a "let's turn the page and get to more" kind of read for me!  I give this a 5/5 Kitty's Paws UP!

 

 

***This ARC copy was given in exchange for an honest review.

 

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