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The Man from Saigon: A Novel [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Marti Leimbach (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 23, 2010
An enthralling and beautiful new novel about love and allegiance during the Vietnam War, from the author of Daniel Isn't Talking and Dying Young

 It's 1967, and Susan Gifford is one of the first female correspondents on assignment in Saigon, dedicated to her job and passionately in love with an American TV reporter. Son is a Vietnamese photographer anxious to get his work into the American press. Together they cover every aspect of the war from combat missions to the workings of field hospitals. Then one November morning, narrowly escaping death during an ambush, Susan and Son find themselves the prisoners of three Vietcong soldiers who have been separated from their unit.

Now, under constant threat from American air strikes, helpless in the hands of the enemy, they face the daily hardships of the jungle together. As time passes, the bond between Susan and Son deepens, and it becomes increasingly difficult for Son to harbor the secret that could have profound consequences for them both.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Amazon Exclusive: Karl Marlantes Reviews The Man from Saigon

A graduate of Yale University and a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, Karl Marlantes served as a Marine in Vietnam, where he was awarded the Navy Cross, the Bronze Star, two Navy Commendation Medals for valor, two Purple Hearts, and ten air medals. His debut novel, Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War, will be published in April 2010. Read his exclusive guest review of The Man from Saigon:

This novel is one of the great examples of artistic imagination. Marti Leimbach was just starting grammar school at the time in which she set The Man from Saigon. She wasn’t there--but if you read this book, you will be.

Writers are always told in writing classes to write about what you know. What Leimbach knows and writes about superbly is the human heart, its relationship with others, and its conflicts with duty, fear, and ambition. This is the primary focus of the novel. A young woman is assigned to cover the Vietnam War for her women’s magazine. "Women’s interests... orphans, hospitals, brave young GIs, gallant doctors...” Once there, however, she learns about the deadly fascination of war, and is constantly getting herself into scrapes that terrify her and make her fervently wish she’d stayed in some rear area where it was safe and where her editor expected her to stay. But something pulls her back and she’s at it again--and again terrified. All the while, she finds herself becoming deeply involved with a war-sick, married reporter who’s been there 23 months but can’t seem to go home, and her photographer, a Vietnamese man who speaks flawless English and never talks about his background or his frequent disappearances.

The story is set in Vietnam in 1967. This reviewer, a Vietnam veteran, was initially skeptical that Leimbach could pull it off. Through obviously careful and considerable research, however, going through memoirs and articles of the time that told the stories of people like Army nurses, women correspondents, and soldiers on both sides, she has constructed a realistic and fascinating setting. This takes not only skill, but courage. Any time a writer steps outside of her skin, for example, into the skin of a jaded, male war correspondent, or into a time and place she has never inhabited, she exposes herself to mistakes and criticism. If the writer doesn’t do this, then her art stands limited to her experience. Even Ernest Hemingway, who definitely knew how to fish, was neither old nor Cuban when he wrote The Old Man and the Sea. Then there was Emily Dickinson.

Just like her protagonist, who exposes herself to danger to get the story, Leimbach does this to tell the story. You won’t want to put it down for anything except reluctant pauses for necessities. --Karl Marlantes


Marti Leimbach on The Man from Saigon

I was a baby when the war in Vietnam began. The images on our black and white television were as close to the conflict as I came and my novel reflects nothing of my personal experience. It may therefore seem risky, even improper, to have written a novel that takes place in 1967 just before Tet. I am the wrong gender and generation. I have never lived in a war zone or even held a gun. For me as a writer, however, the war in Vietnam proved impossible to resist.

Of course, I am not the only writer who has been drawn to this war. An entire generation of journalists competed to gain access. Many were women: Kate Webb, Frances Fitzgerald, Gloria Emerson, to name a few. Some were captured, injured. Dickie Chappelle was killed. Nothing that happened--not the bombings or the landmines or constant fire--stopped them. While reading their memoirs I was constantly reminded of their bravery and determination. Martha Gellhorn wrote urgent letters begging for a chance to report there, stating, "All I really wanted was to get to Vietnam."

But war isn’t romantic. It is about killing and about death. A soldier sends a letter home, describing the smell of that morning’s bacon, rubbing red dirt onto the bottom of the page to show his parents the color of the earth in this different world. Later, he is killed. Not weeks later, but hours. I write about what it might have been like to live with such constant uncertainty, about soldiers on both sides, about journalists and jungles, about things that happened or might have happened. I owe the novel to the tireless recording of others much bolder than myself, and wrote from a safe distance, far from the events of that time. --Marti Leimbach


From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Leimbach (Dying Young) sets her vivid and powerful new novel in 1967 Vietnam to tell the story of Susan Gifford, a women's magazine writer who arrives in-country to write human interest stories about the war. Instead, she ends up covering combat and finds an intense friendship with Son, a Vietnamese photographer, and an equally intense love affair with Marc, a married American journalist. During an ambush, Susan and Son are captured by the Vietcong and are marched into the jungle. When they are reported missing, Marc drops a potentially big story to find them. Meanwhile, Susan begins to suspect that Son may not be who he seems. Leimbach masterfully conjures the hothouse atmosphere of foreign correspondents in Saigon in the late 1960s, and in Susan she has created a heroine who is a worthy counterpart to the real life reporters who covered the war. Whether describing a convoy taking fire, a farcical press briefing, a quiet moment between Susan and Marc, or the ironic aftermath of Susan's ordeal, Leimbach expertly captures the contradictions of the war, making this a solid addition to the literature of an endlessly reconsidered conflict. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Nan A. Talese (February 23, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385529864
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385529860
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 1.2 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #895,817 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best novel I've read in years, March 10, 2010
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E. Welke (Kirkland, WA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Man from Saigon: A Novel (Hardcover)
Among the wonders of America's Civil War literature was Stephen Crane's "Red Badge of Courage." The author never saw a battle. I am stunned by how vividly Marti Leimbach has captured the horrific detail of combat and social disruption in Southeast Asia during the 1960's. One might conclude that at some point in her career she served with the Rangers in Vietnam, and the Army Nursing Corp., and managed to squeeze in a couple of years as a war correspondent, all the while carousing in Saigon bars and working as a hyper-observant sociologist and jungle ecologist. The research she put into "The Man from Saigon" is absolutely astonishing! Ms. Leimbach teaches creative writing at Oxford University, and her students are fortunate indeed to study with such a gifted author.

"The Man from Saigon" is the best novel I've read in years. From start to finish I couldn't set it down... and it is not a "quick read." I long ago lost interest in reliving the wars of Southeast Asia, and I'm not very attracted to love stories. I love outstanding writing, however, and I love this novel. The twists of plot, the realism, the complex characters, the attention to gritty detail, the frequent surprises of observation, the exploration of human emotions and behaviors, and above all the pure quality of craftsmanship, cover to cover. It is an adventure, a romance, a slice of histoty, a brilliant novel.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best book of the year, March 8, 2010
This review is from: The Man from Saigon: A Novel (Hardcover)
The Man From Saigon is one of the best books I've read this year. It made the fear, stench, and horror of the Viet Nam War come alive. Some of the battle scenes are the most riveting and terrifying I've come across in a long time. Sometimes I had to put the book down and rest before I could go on.The story was told from a different angle than most Viet Nam books and was totally unpredictable.I loved this book and recommend it for anyone that enjoys a real page turner and an honest account of war. Everyone, please read this book. You will not be disappointed and you'll never forget it!!!!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Departure and Loss, April 2, 2010
This review is from: The Man from Saigon: A Novel (Hardcover)
The Vietnam War meant different things to different people because they cane to the war in very different ways. Some entered it, kicking and screaming, via the nerve-wracking military draft of the sixties, and a few joined up in order to avoid the prison time they deserved. Others, for reasons of their own, volunteered to join the fight. But, even then, common foot soldiers saw the war through eyes very different from those of the career officers who led them. Nurses, doctors and journalists had yet another Vietnam War experience - and, then, there were those rare female journalists who experienced something else altogether different.

Marti Leimbach's latest novel, "The Man from Saigon," tells the story of one of those female reporters, Susan Gifford, a woman who came to Vietnam to write special interest stories for a women's magazine but could not resist the dangerous pull of going into the field with her fellow reporters, a decision she would often regret after it was too late to do anything about it. Susan's willingness to place herself in harm's way would eventually lead to her capture (along with Son, her Vietnamese photographer) by three North Vietnamese soldiers who would march her deep into the jungle in search of the unit from which they had become separated prior to stumbling upon Susan and Son.

"The Man from Saigon," though, is about more than the trauma associated with chaotic firefights and ambushes by enemy soldiers. It is about personal relationships and how those relationships are shaped and changed when the constant possibility of a brutal, and sudden, death hangs over one's head for months at a time. The novel explores the willingness of those who place themselves in that kind of situation to live all aspects of their lives on the edge. Needless to say, romance seldom plays much of a role in the practical relationships that often develop inside a war zone.

Susan finds herself involved with two very different men: a physical relationship with a married network news broadcaster who has been in-country for some twenty-nine months and a friendly relationship with the Vietnamese photographer who shares her tiny apartment in Saigon between their trips into the field to cover the war. In a way, she loves both of them, and neither of them - but together they give her the emotional support she needs to survive her Vietnam experience.

Marti Leimbach offers an insightful look at the whole Vietnam War experience, but with a slightly different twist to it. As she puts it in the novel, "It feels to her (Susan) that the universal theme of this country is departure and loss. Everyone is always in the process of leaving. Everyone is dying or disappearing or going away or being sent home. You never got used to it."

Those readers who have read, or plan to read, the moving new Vietnam War novel, "Matterhorn," by Karl Marlantes will find that "The Man from Saigon" is a nice companion piece in the way it looks at the war from a completely different point-of-view, this time from the viewpoint of those paid to be there to tell the rest of us what was really happening there.
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