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Of Rice and Men: A Novel of Vietnam [Hardcover]

Richard Galli (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 31, 2006
Spreading democracy takes more than cutting-edge military hardware. Winning the hearts and minds of a troubled nation is a special mission we give to bewildered young soldiers who can’t speak the native language, don’t know the customs, can’t tell friends from enemies, and–in this wonderfully outrageous Iraq-era novel about Vietnam–wonder why they have to risk their lives spraying peanut plants, inoculating pigs, and hauling miracle rice seed for Ho Chi Minh.

Brash, eye-opening, and surprisingly comic, Of Rice and Men displays the same irreverent spirit as the black-comedy classics Catch-22 and MASH–as it chronicles the American Army’s little known “Civil Affairs” soldiers who courageously roam hostile war zones, not to kill or to destroy, but to build, to feed, and to heal. Unprepared, uncertain, and naive, they find it impossible to make the skeptical population fall in love with them.

But it’s thrilling to watch them try.

Among the unforgettable characters: Guy Lopaca, an inept Army-trained interpreter who can barely say “I can’t speak Vietnamese” in Vietnamese, but has no trouble chatting with stray dogs and water buffalo. Guy’s friends include “Virgin Mary” Crocker, a pragmatic nurse earning a fortune spending nights with homesick soldiers; Paul Gianelli, a heroic builder of medical clinics who doesn’t want to be remembered badly, so he never goes home; and Tyler DeMudge, whose cure for every problem is a chilly martini, a patch of shade, and the theory that every bad event in life is “good training” for enduring it again.

Pricelessly funny, disarming, thought-provoking, as fresh as the morning headlines, and bursting with humor, affection, and pride, Of Rice and Men is a sincere tribute to those young men and women, thrust into our hearts-and-minds wars, who try to do absolute good in a hopeless situation.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A comic novel about the Vietnam War? Has that much time passed? In fact, this is not the first, but as Vietnam novels go, it's pretty funny. Guy Lopaca arrives in Vietnam fresh out of the elite Army Language School and is assigned to work for civil affairs, units set up to win hearts and minds by providing technical help to villagers. Guy quickly realizes the language he learned from American Ph.D.s bears no resemblance to any spoken in Vietnam, and much of the book recounts his slapstick efforts at communication. Of the 73 episodic chapters, 60 or so feature Guy; other POV draftees include ex-business student Paul Gianelli and aspiring academic Arthur Grissom. To his credit, Galli, a former lawyer and civil affairs interpreter in Vietnam who was a member of GIs for Peace, makes cultural misunderstanding a two-way street. And despite the humor, few characters are comic clichés: no officer is more than mildly incompetent; enlisted men yearn for home but do their jobs, more or less. The war is horrible, but occurs mostly out of sight. This is a clever, quirky, surprisingly uncynical view of Vietnam. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Nearly 35 years after his return from the Vietnam War, Galli has written an unusual, affecting first novel drawn from his experiences there. Of Rice and Men is the story of a group of remfs ("rear-echelon m*f*s") stationed at a base along Vietnam's south central coast. Guy Lopaca is a translater (as was the author on his tour of duty) who discovers on his arrival that he speaks not a word of Vietnamese: "like trying to translate fireworks on the Fourth of July." His company, along with providing support to frontline troops, has been assigned to win Vietnamese hearts and minds by "helping" local farmers grow rice and peanuts. More a series of vignettes than a narrative, the novel unfolds with beguiling tenderness, humor, and wisdom as it follows the efforts of GIs and locals to make sense of one another and of the nightmare in which they've all found themselves. "I didn't want to take you where you've been before," the author explains to readers in his afterword. "I wanted to take you to a quieter place." In this singular addition to the Vietnam War collection, Galli has. Alan Moores
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Presidio Press; First Edition edition (January 31, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0891418857
  • ISBN-13: 978-0891418856
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,208,007 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gianelli's review, March 5, 2006
This review is from: Of Rice and Men: A Novel of Vietnam (Hardcover)
Of Rice and Men

Richard Galli's novel, "OF Rice and Men" is the MASH of Vietnam - humorous, sensitive, poignant and serious. You take a group of college educated men, some with Peace Corps experience, you draft them in the Army and place them in the same platoon in Vietnam and give them an impossible humanitarian mission. The consequences become Galli journey through the "heart's and minds" rear area battlefield of Vietnam.

The story to me is more personal than distant, more fact rather than fiction for the character Paul Gianelli was modeled after me and my two tours with this unit. As our brothers in arms died in the rice fields our small group tried to bring peace and development to the civilians that were caught up in the daily horror of surviving in Vietnam. Like Iraq today, the civilians seemed to be in the way of "our" war and both sides had no problem murdering the innocent. Galli's words give no images of battle hardened American soldiers attacking jungle fortifications but it gives a good look at what little American soldiers were dying for in Vietnam. As our foreign policy tried to "bomb" democracy into Vietnam with a strategy of "destroying villages in order to save them" many of us working at village level realized that America would never be victorious if our actions betrayed our own US Constitution and Bill of Rights.

This is a critical must read book for those not only interested in the history of Vietnam but in the history of why we fail so often in our foreign policy. It should be a text for all military in "Civil Affairs" operations. For the current history student the parallels to what is currently happening in Iraq are too clear. Today Civil Affairs has increased importance in Iraq. Many point to the "good" work our military is doing in civic action projects in our newest war zone. The men of the platoon in Hue City know that unless "good works" is intertwine with respect for culture, religion, families and human rights then the only result will be defeat. Richard Galli's book does not necessarily lead us to this conclusion but the reader will be drawn there once they read "Of Rice and Men".

Paul Giannone

Expert in Disaster Response and Planning

Experience in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and the US
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The wry side of war., February 27, 2006
By 
Steven C. Rosen (West Hollywood, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Of Rice and Men: A Novel of Vietnam (Hardcover)
This is a big book - big emotions, big characters, big stories. It is the paper trail tale of war, the non-combat troops who fought the battles of civil affairs, soldiers ordered to engage the indigeneous Vietnamese and teach them how to grow rice and build permanent structures. In Of Rice And Men, author Galli focues on the remf's - the rear echelon mother fu--ckers as they were so designated by the grunt on the line - who were forced to venture out into the hills and paddy fields without weapons, without support, and daily put their lives on the line.

This is a gloriously dramatic book in the fashion of Catch-22 and Tim O'Brien's best works, a shining light on the stupidity, savagery, and sometime sweetness of the Vietnam War.

The author was there and it is in these pages. Beautiful prose and deadly accurate.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Whether you were a grunt or remf you'll enjoy this book, March 3, 2006
This review is from: Of Rice and Men: A Novel of Vietnam (Hardcover)
We had our "Naked and the Dead" with "Better times than These",

our "Guadalcanl Diary" with "We Were Soldiers Once and Young".

Now we've finally got our very own "Catch-22" with "Of Rice and Men". It's a very funny and insightful story of one man and his

tour of duty as a translater with a civil affairs unit up in Hue City. Well at least the central character, Guy Lopaca, thought he was a translater till his CO has him delivering "Miracle Rice" that the 'Yards don't want to plant nor grow because it tastes awful so they end up selling it to the NVA. The story illustrates the stupidity of the military with bewildered humor and the futility of trying to make sense of why we were there to begin with. There's even a Christmas Carol:

"Jingle Bells, Mortar Shells.

VC in the grass,

take your Merry Christmas

and stick it up your ass". If you were there get this book and read it...hell, get it and read it even if you weren't there. You won't be disappointed.
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