Review
"(Viet Nam) left Gratzer with severe visible wounds, the kind that surgeon's scalpels work to repair. His words have allowed a different type of reconstruction." (Mick Holien, The Missoulian, January 6, 1998). "Books about Vietnam have been written by journalists, correspondents, politicians and generals. But if you want to get a feel for what it was really all about, read the poetry in General Issue Blues by a warrior who almost died there." (Montana Arts Council Artist Search, March/April 1998). While more than a dozen major surgeries have helped repair the physical wounds caused by bullets and shrapnel, Gratzer used poetry to help heal the mental wounds left by the war. This collection of poems recounts his wartime experiences and 'the challenges of life after survival.'" --
Book Life, The Missoulian, December 21, 1997"George Gratzer takes you back to the war in Vietnam -- his poems evoke vivid memories of rice paddy ambushes, helicopter assaults, mines and booby traps. G.I. Blues wrenches your heart, grips your gut, brings tears to the eyes of the toughest old soldier. Well done, Sonny." --
Colonel Joe Clemons, Infantry, US Army, Ret."Once a tough kids from Butte, Sonny Gratzer came home from Viet Nam with a chest full of medals and severe war wounds. Readers need to keep a keen eye and ear open for Gratzer and other veterans who write. Years later their poems and stories express wonder, grief and healing from some of the deepest sources." --
Patrick Todd, Montana Poet and Humanitarian"Sonny Gratzer's poems capture the scent of combat, the dangers and miseries of war, and the many kinds of wounds suffered even after the battles have been fought." --
Nathaniel Blumberg, dean and professor, editor, publisher, and author of Charlie of 666: A Memoir
Product Description
GI Blues is my poetic venture into a past life as a warrior in Viet Nam, the friends, sights, sounds and enemies of the place, and a return to God's country. It is a dive into other depths, losing lovers and loved ones, confronting regrets and coming to terms with it all. So far I've given it a fair run.
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