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3 Reviews
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Vividly and with intensity about the Korean War,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Forgotten War Remembered, Korea: 1950-1953: A War Correspondent's Notebook & Today's Danger in Korea (Hardcover)
Shinn's book tells it like it was in the fighting for Seoul, the anxieties at the Pusan Perimeter, the Inchon landing (the startegic masterstroke by General Douglas MacArthur which turned out to be a Shinn 'scoop'), and the communist duplicity in negotiations at Panmunjom. No amount of research can recreate the good, the bad and the ugly of wars like the Korean War. This man Shinn was there and has written about it vividly and with intensity." Ed Nellan, a Tokyo-based columnist
5.0 out of 5 stars
The worst war, the Korean War,
By Tiger Wald (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Forgotten War Remembered, Korea: 1950-1953: A War Correspondent's Notebook & Today's Danger in Korea (Hardcover)
The author, Bill Shinn was born in North Korea and witnessed the tragic history of Korea, particularly how the commists of the North started the waf. He was a war correspondent of AP and recorded all the details of the actual war scenes as vividly as accurately such as defence of Pusan perimeter, Inchon Landing, the rollback operation, Chinese intervention and Seoul retaken for the last time.
A Korean war veteran recommended me this book to read. He said he could not read it without tears remembering the worst war in the history of the world. The author also provides his historical and political views of the future of the Korean Penninsula. This book is recommended not just for the Korean war veterans but slso those who are interested in the fate of Korean penninsula. It is certainly a tragedy that the penninsula is still devided in two, the North and the South.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Korea through the eyes of a Korean,
By
This review is from: The Forgotten War Remembered, Korea: 1950-1953: A War Correspondent's Notebook & Today's Danger in Korea (Hardcover)
Good book. Shinn is a solid writer, not aurprising since he was a news reporter in the Korean War era. But this book is about the war, and the soldiers, NOT about Shinn himself, which makes it a refreshing relief from most 'by journalist' accounts of the war. Journalists tend to be a clannish lot, repulsive at worst and tolerable at best, and Korean war journalists seem unable to avoid the mutual admiration society syndrome, especially when it comes to Marguerite Higgins. Sure, Shinn falls a bit for that; but his experiences in Korea, Japan, and America in the post WWII period make thrilling reading. We forget how people such as Shinn had to live by their wits and their pluck, in this era. Compare this with todays' journalists who gaggle constantly about restrictions on press freedom at the same time they are protected by the military as embedded writers. I always thought that if the UPI/AP wire networks had to finance their own protection in the field---IMAGINE THAT!, a company of reporter-commandos---their attitude toward war might be just a tad more balanced. Heaven knows with a few journalists losing their heads in Iraq in recent years, we now hear a lot less about 'oppressed muslims' than we did after Sept. 11th.
But i digress! Shinn's book is kind of 3 books in one. There is his personal story of how he came to be a journalist on NE asian affairs in the post WWII period. These stories are captivating and uniquely personal, and are the most enjoyable part of the book. In contrast, his renditions of the war itself...the early rout, pusan perimeter, etc, are fairly stale. BUT..as a Korean, M. Shinn does do a great service in pointing out the successes of (south) Korean regiments, even in the wars' earliest and darkest days. The part about todays' danger, written in the middle 1990s, seems somewhat stale and archaic now. That is one problem with writing on a 'current event.' The writing is out of date almost by the time the print dries. Nor is their anything new in these sections. One interesting style that makes Shinn's book a unique text is that many of the articles seem drawn directly from, if not outright renditions of, the notes he collected in the field as a writer. There is a lack of polish, a spontaneity, a disjointed nature to the text, which gives it an appeal. Overall a good book. |
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The Forgotten War Remembered, Korea: 1950-1953: A War Correspondent's Notebook & Today's Danger in Korea by Hwa-bong Sin (Hardcover - May 1, 1996)
$24.50
In Stock | ||