Captures the horror, confusion, and courage of combatants in Vietnam, on both sides of the fight, as the struggle moves toward the day when the Tet invasion explodes and changes the course of the war
Allan Cole was an American author and television writer, who wrote or co-wrote nearly thirty books.The son of a CIA operative, Cole was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and raised in Europe, the Middle East and the Far East. He collaborated with Chris Bunch on the Sten science fiction series, as well the Far Kingdoms Series, and the historical novels, A Reckoning For Kings and Daughter Of Liberty.
He co-authored a non-fiction book A Cop's Life with his uncle, Thomas Grubb; and a fantasy novel Lords Of Terror with Russian author Nick Perumov.His solo books include the fantasy novels that make up the Timura Trilogy and the thrillers, Dying Good and Drowned Hopes.
He sold more than a hundred television episodes, including ones for Quincy, M.E., The Rockford Files, The Incredible Hulk, Dinosaucers, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, Magnum, P.I., Werewolf, and Walker, Texas Ranger.
He was also a Los Angeles newspaper editor and investigative reporter for 14 years.
Cole was married to Chris Bunch's sister, Kathryn. He died of cancer in Boca Raton, Florida, aged 75, on March 29, 2019.
I first read A Reckoning for Kings in 1987 when I was in the Army R.O.T.C. program at Boise State University.
At that time I was a young cadet fascinated by all things having to do with the Army. I remember thinking that the book captured the feel and the rhythms of Army life. Whether that be the peacetime Army or the wartime Army. Also during that time there were still many Vietnam vets in the service and I gave this book to one of the cadre members (a master sergeant) to read.
The sergeant had served two tours over there. When he finished reading it he told me that the authors had done a better job of capturing the war in all it's nuances, then many of the other Vietnam novels he had read. There were no weird musings on the nature of man and no bizarre drug induced fantasies; plot tropes that so many other Vietnam War authors were using in the seventies and early eighties. A Reckoning for Kings is a straight forward story without any literary pretensions.
I have found that often those things which seemed so impressive to me at the age of nineteen (eighteen, twenty etc.) are diminished at the age of forty-three. Well this novel hasn't lost anything. It's still wonderfully detailed, suspenseful, humorous and intelligent. One could do far worse this summer then reading this book. If this sounds at all interesting to you get a copy and read it.
SECOND TIME AROUND It's still holding up. That nineteen year old kid that read this book in 1987 is long gone, but the book has aged well. I find myself looking at the characters and their situations differently, but it's still a very solid book. Well written and readable.
I'm stunned. This book is the best Vietnam war novel I've ever read and gets an immediate place on my favourites list.
Why? Because it uses the right elements of all war fiction and is somehow able to keep a story alive, create rich characters by the handful and correctly address the atmosphere at all times. It has the staccato feel of 'The Things They Carried' by Tim O'Brien, the change in perspectives displayed so nicely in the double-feature 'Letters from Iwo Jima' and 'Flags of our Fathers', the brotherhood and camaraderie from 'Band of Brothers', the reluctance and stupidity from 'Hearts in Atlantis' and the utter hopeless, maddening desperation of 'Apocalypse Now' and 'Jarhead'.
400 pages of awfulness, wry smiles and life-changing moments a book that is as much about characters confronting themselves as confronting the 'enemy'.
This book was written by two authors, one being a service person, the other, not. Although, you can sometimes pick up on the variation in writing style, because of the two people contributing to this book, there is an incredible amount of detail which adds to the authenticity of the story.
Now as to the story itself, two major scenes stick in my mind. Firstly when blind pig rips the molten hot turret of the tank and has no concern for his searing, burning hands. Then later, how he found gold loot, rightfully so, since he fought so hard. The next scene was when Duan was in the cave, the battle lost, bombshells illuminating the night sky, and how the buddha head smiled at him, mocking all his efforts hitherto
I would defintelt recommend this to any person considering serving because it shows the cold, brutal reality of combat, while also giving a vistage of the heartfelt commerraderrie of men fighting these wars.
This is the best book I've read so far, of the books Bunch and Cole did together. It's also I believe the first novel the writing duo published, and radically different that any of the sci-fi/fantasy books that will follow, in that it's a follows a unit of characters through the Tet Offensive in Viet Nam.
A narrow double sided view of the Tet Offensive, from the perspective of the commanders and their soldiers from the North and South in the Song Nhanh Province near Saigon during 1967 & 1968. A very well documented Historical Fiction with many details of, why and how, that you don’t normally find in other stories.