Publisher's Synopsis
Directing the big weapons, naval guns and Marine Corps artillery, Richard makes his decisions hour by hour -- at incalculable cost.
Katherine is tormented by her body’s loneliness and by her horror at the daily drumming of news from the war. If her husband is the good man she believes he is, how can he kill?
Richard doesn’t see it quite that way. He asks, rather, If he is the man he should be, how could he place himself anywhere else but with his men?
Katherine finds that bathing” in the snow can chill her body but not suppress its longings.
Richard finds that the intervals of peace” between combat operations are harder to endure than the fighting. Two powerful forces are pulling him apart, love for his wife and daughter back home, and the rhythm of fight and recovery Vietnam.
Donald Pfarrerwas awarded the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart for his service in the Vietnam War. On returning from Vietnam Pfarrer covered the antiwar movement for theMilwaukee Journal. He later wrote extensively for the paper on crime and politics. He is a graduate of Harvard College and the authoir of five novels. He is currently writing a novel about an adulterous love affair in wartime. His next project will be a novel placed within the legal system. More detail can be found at donaldpfarrer.com