Bury Me With Soldiers

One Grunt's Honest Story About Vietnam

by C. W. Standiford


Formats

Softcover
$14.50
$11.50
E-Book
$3.95
Hardcover
$25.45
$20.50
Softcover
$11.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 4/3/2003

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 184
ISBN : 9781403395245
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 184
ISBN : 9781403395238
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 184
ISBN : 9781410706577

About the Book

The late 60’s in America was tumulus and uncertain. A young Oregon ranch kid must decide whether to flee or fight. The young man understands he will not flee.

During the fifty days of living like a wild dog in a dirt den the young Marine witnesses the decimation of his grunt company. From his first patrol where his new found fellow Oregonian dies in front of him, to the wayward 500- pound bomb that kills and maims several of his company, the young marine sees that the death around him is like a slow flesh-eating virus.

Ignoring the old military axiom never volunteer the marine volunteers for a new recon company being formed. He and the other volunteers play cat and mouse in the dark and unholy jungles of Vietnam. The casualties still mount, but for the first time the enemy is now seen by the transformed warrior and he is able to fight back.

Unlike PLATOON this account shows the honor, the devotion to duty and even a few laughs. These are not Americans who fought one another, but Americans who fought for America and men this Marine would like to be buried with.


About the Author

Wayne Standiford lives in the small town of Condon, Oregon, where he works for an electrical contracting company and his wife, Deborah, operates an imprinting business. Wayne and Deborah stay busy taking part in community affairs and keeping track of Shawn, Cody, Cassie, Travis, and Ryan. They are the proud grandparents of Isaac and Wyatt.

Wayne was awarded a Navy Commendation Medal for his "composure under fire" because no one could see his toes curled inside his jungle boots. For the radio incident he was awarded the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry. This medal should have been an Olympic Gold for the fastest human on the planet on the only day of his life he was able to move really fast. Older and much slower now, Wayne still grunts for a living.