Frederick Downs
The Killing Zone
My Life in the Vietnam War
"The best damned book from the point of view of the infantrymen who fought
there." Army Times
In 1967 Frederick Downs arrived in Vietnam as a green but determined twenty-three-year-old
infantry lieutenant. In the months of brutal combat to follow, Downs was to face
the most lethal and loathsome dangers, all the while following orders, keeping
his men as safe as he could, and searching for the conviction and then the hope
that the war was worth the sacrifice. He would leave with a shattered body, but
a spirit still intact. The Killing Zone is his story, and it stands tall
with the best books ever written about men in combat.
"Unlike any other Vietnam book I have read . . . Downs has witheld his rage and
written a book that is as explicit, as honest, as Ron Kovic's Born on the
Fourth of July, but in a completely different way. There is no stridency,
no moral to be pondered. 'This is the way it was for us,' he says simply, 'the
platoon of Delta One-six.'" Raphael Sagalyn, The New Republic
"A story every American should read . . . it tells better than has been told
before what it is like to fight in Vietnam. . . . To say it is hard to put down
is an understatement, and once finished it sticks and burns in the memory,
painful, haunting, infuriating, and yet somehow touching and reassuring."
Louisville Courier-Journal
"The author spares neither himself nor the reader in telling it exactly as is
was . . . a tribute to the courage and sacrifice of human beings under stress,
which must include the author and the men to whom the book is dedicated, and
also their enemies." Washington Post Book World
Frederick Downs received four Purple Hearts, the Bronze Star with Valor,
and the Silver Star for his service in the Vietnam War. He is also the author of
Aftermath and No Longer Enemies, Not Yet Friends. He is currently
the Director of Prosthetic and Sensory Aids for the Veterans Administration.
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