Tattletale

by Charlie Palek


Formats

Softcover
£11.75
Softcover
£11.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 01/09/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 320
ISBN : 9780759622272

About the Book

Tattletale is a true-life book told in an easy, "sittin’ round the campfire" style that will appeal to a broad audience. It does not deal much with tactics or government policies, but the human side of the grunt and Army aviator trying to survive an unpopular and confusing conflict.

Besides regaling the reader with the horror and humor of Americans in combat, the end of the book has comments written by members of my family. Each family member tells how they survived the mental anguish of the first "TV War," wondering where I was in all the mess, they watched on television each night. These comments are perhaps the most poignant part of the book.

Some of the information in the book has been written from memory, but most was gleaned from letters and tapes sent to my parents and my girlfriend during those two tours. Listening to my voice on the 30-year-old tapes was haunting but provides detail fresh from the trenches. I left the photos captioned as I had over 30 years ago. I felt they were best represented as I wrote them, hopefully giving the reader a feel for how I was thinking at the time. This book has been a labor of love and hate; I hope you enjoy it.


About the Author

Having had an interest in military history since I was 10, I felt the need to experience war for myself as an infantryman, the one true warrior. I graduated from high school in 1967, and Vietnam was heating up fast. I volunteered immediately for Army infantry and Vietnam service. My lottery number was above three hundred and my family and friends knew that I could probably "sit it out" if I wanted to, but I had to seek the adventure.

Born in 1949, in Southern Illinois dairy country, I was always out in the fields, hunting groundhogs, fishing or plinking at starlings and blackbirds with my trusty 22. Schoolwork was a necessary evil, except for history. Sports were something I did not excel in and they were not a big part of my life.

After discharge from the Army in 1970, I received a degree in Still Photography from Southern Illinois and began my career in portraiture, making people happy with their own faces. Nature and wildlife photography was, and still is, my favorite pastime. I married Roxy, who wrote to me on the average of one letter every three days while I was in Vietnam, and we will celebrate our thirtieth anniversary in 2001.

I have photographed grizzlies in the wilds of Alaska, and have even done some parachuting, but nothing has given me an adrenaline rush like combat. She’s a hard taskmaster, but completely unforgettable. I’m sure most combat veterans will agree.