Moveable Forts and Magazines

A Novel of Vietnam

by Dick Rose


Formats

Softcover
$11.95
E-Book
$4.95
Softcover
$11.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 1/1/2002

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 224
ISBN : 9780759617339
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 1
ISBN : 9780759617322

About the Book

Moveable Forts and Magazines explores the sibling themes of conscience and responsibility. The thoughts and feelings of two men -- one young, innocent and practical; the other, older, experienced, and idealistic -- are examined.

In the frame of the present, the main story deals with Senior Chief Journalist Dan Levin, his relationship with the Navy, his doubts about his leadership abilities, and the handling of a public relations crisis over the apparent desertion of the admiral’s son. Dan is an idealistic and conscientious career Navyman trying to adjust to an environment that is frequently hostile and always alien to him. He is concerned about his obligations to the Navy, to his family, to his friend (the admiral’s son), and to his conscience.

Interwoven with Dan’s scenes are those showing Lieutenant (junior grade) Fred Hetherington, Annapolis graduate, attack helicopter pilot, and product of generations of in-breeding within the Navy’s aristocracy. He, too, is attempting to reconcile his conscience with his duty. He has refused to return to his unit in Vietnam and has taken sanctuary with a peace activist group. There, he begins to question the correctness of his action, while he seeks someone who will understand him and his action.

Connecting the two men are past conversations and letters, alluded to and shown in flashback, in which they have discussed the meaning of obligation and the apparent irrationality and lack of purpose of the American involvement in Vietnam.

Death is present as the reader meets, in flashback, Lieutenant Pete Rogers, who, the reader knows from present action, will be killed in combat. Facing death daily, Pete is unaware of its certainty for him in the immediate future. Both Pete’s life and his death influence the actions of Fred Hetherington.

The two parallel lines develop as Fred matures and makes certain basic discoveries about himself, his sense of obligation and duty, and his need for understanding. Fred’s increasing awareness has its counterpoint in Dan Levin’s dilemma as he ponders his responsibility for Fred’s actions, while attempting to avoid making any decision.

Natalie Levin’s timely intervention brings all of the points together, focusing the problems and forcing the decisions.

At the novel’s end, the two men have switched positions, and each has reacted in his own personal way -- Fred Hetherington gains awareness, Dan Levin suppressing reality.

The story purposely has no moral, although the reader is indirectly invited to extract his own theme as he chooses the character -- Dan Levin, Natalie Levin, Fred Hetherington, the Admiral, Pete Rogers, or one of the observer participants -- with whom he wishes to identify.


About the Author

Dick Rose was born in Chicago, IL. August 16, 1931. He attended school in Chicago through the tenth grade before moving to Los Angeles, Cal., in 1947. He finished high school in 1949 and graduated from Los Angeles City College June 14, 1951, one day before entering the Navy.

Though he had tried to enlist in the Army in August 1950, at the outbreak of the Korean War, he was classified as 4-F. By June 1951, as the Korean War entered its sixth month of stalemate, he was re-classified 1-A. His patriotic ardor somewhat dimmed, he opted for Naval Service.

He entered naval service as a radioman and was assigned to the USS Pollux, a supply ship homeported in Yokosuka, Japan in March 1952. A year later, he found out about the recently formed Journalist rating. He applied for the Class A Journalism school and was selected to attend. Following graduation in September 1953, he found himself back in Yokosuka, on the staff of Commander Naval Forces, Far East in the History & Awards section, preparing a month-to-month history of the Navy’s participation in Korea.

He left the Navy in May 1955, attended UCLA, and married Barbara Feder. Bored with the study of 17th century English writers, he re-entered the Navy in February, 1956. He was assigned to the News Department of Armed Forces Radio, Taiwan, in Taipei. He was the news director, newscaster three times a day, and hosted a couple of musical shows.

In November 1956, his daughter, Debbi, was born in Taipei.

Successive tours of duty from 1959-1965 found him advancing in rate, serving in Seattle, Washington; Hollywood, California; and Pt Mugu, California.

In 1965, he returned to Japan and Armed Forces Radio to head the news bureau at Far East Network, Tokyo. A promotion to Senior Chief Petty Officer brought a sooner-than expected transfer to Saigon, Vietnam, on the staff of Commander US Naval Forces, Vietnam.

In Vietnam, he was the senior enlisted man and officer supervisor for a 12-man contingent of navy journalists and photographers. He supervised their assignments to Navy detachments throughout the country, primarily in the Mekong Delta, south of Saigon. During his one-year tour, he participated in fourteen combat missions on attack helicopters, river patrol boats, and with the U.S. Marine Corps-trained Vietnamese commandos, service which earned him the Navy Commendation Medal with combat V.

It was during this service, as he personally observed the progress of the war, attended press briefings for news medial correspondents, read situation and action reports, read the English language version of Saigon newspapers, and listened to his fellow servicemen of all four services, that his disillusion began.

He finished his Navy career in Coronado, California, on the staff of Commander Amphibious Force, US Pacific Fleet. Further contact with returning servicemen as well as conscientious objectors who were assigned to the commander’s staff while awaiting their processing out, sharpened his concern over the war. His return to the United States in October, 1968, after a 3-1/2 year absence had introduced him to the increasing opposition to war.

Following his retirement as a Master Chief Journalist in 1971, he entered San Diego State University, earning a BA with honors in English in 1972, and an MA in 1975. While in school, he realized that he had to tell his story, his view as a participant, as a disillusioned career navyman.

The story became his Masters Thesis, Moveable Forts and Magazines, a novel about the Vietnam experience. In it, he was able to dramatize the contradictions and doubts faced by a dedicated and loyal Navyman. It also allowed him to explore an alienation, the outsider status he had always felt as a Jewish second generation American in a WASP-oriented society.

In 1997, he and Barbara retired from the IRS. They moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in January, 2000, where he continues to write, tend his rose bushes and new koi pond waterfall, and prepare occasional tax returns.

Though he had many news stories and feature articles published in military and civilian newspapers and magazines, and wrote an award-winning radio drama in 1966 saluting the Hungarian Freedom Fighter, he remains focused on Vietnam. He was active in Vietnam Veterans of America, where he served in various chapter offices, and edited a newsletter, Frontlines. He was also a contributing editor to the VVA California State newspaper, The California Zephyr.

Throughout his post-Navy career, he wrote humorous newspaper columns for various VA and community newspapers, under the title Through Rose-colored Glasses.

He has compiled a collection of articles, stories and poems about Vietnam, written while there, and afterward, entitled "Vietnam: Through Rose-colored Glasses." He hopes to have it published, soon.