Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Beyond the Call of Duty: The Life of Colonel Robert Howard, America's Most Decorated Green Beret

Rate this book
As a child, Robert Howard was taught by his Granny Callie to always face his threats head-on. Some thirty years later, he emerged from the Vietnam War as America’s most decorated Green Beret.

For the first time, Robert Howard’s story is being told in full. Respected military historian Stephen L. Moore takes readers into the heart of the Vietnam War's covert Special Ops jungle warfare in this immersive, suspenseful read. Through family sources, National Archives documents, and dozens of testimonials from the Green Berets who fought alongside him, this “one-man army” will finally be given the recognition he deserves.

Robert Howard grew up in poverty in a small town in Alabama, with a strong sense of faith and determination. When he enlisted in the army at age seventeen, his Granny Callie’s words echoed in his head, and he pledged to follow them to the bitter end. In the most dire of combat experiences, Howard ran directly toward his opponents, sacrificing his body to protect others and to complete the mission above all else. Time and time again, he survived battles that should have claimed his life, suffering countless bullets, a spinal injury, and shrapnel and blast wounds. Recon commanders who ran missions with him declared him to be the bravest man they had ever met.

In return, Howard received a staggering number of awards and ribbons for valor and distinctive service in combat—over fifty in all, including the Medal of Honor, eight Purple Hearts, the Distinguished Service Cross, a Silver Star, and four Bronze Stars. He holds the distinction of being the only soldier nominated for the Medal of Honor three times in only a thirteen-month period. In total, Howard spent a grueling, treacherous forty months in combat duty in Vietnam, including over two years with MACV-SOG’s elite covert group.

303 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 3, 2024

120 people are currently reading
59 people want to read

About the author

Stephen L. Moore

36 books39 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
137 (68%)
4 stars
50 (25%)
3 stars
12 (6%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
332 reviews5 followers
December 9, 2025
Well this book keeps my kick ass book reading streak intact. Robert “Bob” Howard is one of the greatest war heroes in American history, right up there with Sgt Alvin York and Audie Murphy who was the most decorated American soldier of WWII. Howard joined the military to get away from serious poverty in Alabama. His grandmother taught Bob always to run towards trouble and never retreat. Early in life some neighborhood tough bullies wanted to steal his newer (not new) shoes and he beat the dogshit out of these turds. Well done Bob. Howard eventually joins the Green Berets and MACV-SOG comically enough as a supply Sgt. He does not complain. not his style he just fills in on “across the fence” missions in Cambodia and Laos with small RT teams. Howard gets put in for three medals of honor. He should have won all three but was given one, a Distinguished service cross as well (second highest military honor) and a Silver Star. Howard was wounded in combat 14 times but never cared much for accolades and “only” received eight! purple hearts. Here is an example of what a bad ass mother fucker Bob was. While wounded at the hospital he goes to the chow line in his hospital pajamas because he hates the hospital food (who doesn’t) and while in the chow line two viet cong cock suckers toss a grenade into the chow hall from a passing motorcycle . Bob grabs the MP’s M-16 shoots the rear passenger and kills him causing the driver to crash the motorcycle. The driver flees and Bob chases him down and shoots his ass and leaves both corpses in the street hands the M16 back to the Mp and gets back in the chow line! He received no recognition for this stunning feat. Thank you Robert Howard for being an amazing American and true hero.
210 reviews2 followers
September 20, 2025
Although I did not keep track as I read this book, I see a review says Robert Howard was wounded fourteen times and received eight Purple Hearts during fifty-four months in combat. How four ten month tours of duty in Vietnam come out to fifty-four months, I’m not sure.

What I found most interesting was how Howard slowly found his purpose. Unlike many Vietnam veterans Howard was too young to have also served in World War Two and the Korean War. He enlisted as soon as he turned seventeen well before special operations went from ad hoc to institutionalized in the U.S. military. It was only when he was hospitalized in Vietnam in 1965 after being shot in the cheek and losing several teeth that he made the acquaintance of a Green Beret patient and got transferred to that command.

What Howard did in the Green Berets for the remainder of that first tour is not known. Several times the author states that the records of MACV-SOG, the clandestine organization Howard served in, were completely and deliberately destroyed after the war. He also hypothesizes about the infamous St. Louis archive fire but that destroyed mostly WWII records.

After completing his first Vietnam tour and his official Special Forces training in the U.S. Howard went on his first mission eleven months after having left Vietnam. At this point, page 37, the pace of the book becomes much more detailed.
Profile Image for Bill.
43 reviews2 followers
August 8, 2025
This is the 3rd book I've read covering the heroic service of the guys assigned to MACV-SOG. I've also read Legend, and SOG. I cannot get enough of their stories and I wish today's generations would read to see what true service to country and bravery are. Soldiers like Colonel Robert Howard don't come around every day, but his actions, devotion to duty, and selfless concern for others stand as rock-hard examples that can change men. Notwithstanding the secrecy of their missions and the lack of mission specific material, Stephen Moore does a thorough job of bringing Colonel Howard's life and service into clear view. I was left in awe.

Separate from the story, is a lesson in how poorly our government conducted the war. To allow our enemy nearly free reign to operate inside Laos and Cambodia just to satisfy a few political sensitivities is unforgivable and because of that to allow our KIA and MIA in those countries to be abandoned, is a black mark those leaders will always be known for.
Profile Image for Simon.
9 reviews
January 17, 2026
The book is mostly focused on the war, just a little bit about The life of colonel Howard.

The Vietnam war should never have been here in the first place. By some Democrat warmongers in the 1960s, how many patriots had perished in some foreign lands? For what they had fought? Paving the way for global democracy? For nothing.
The kind of SOG strategy could never work. In a larger sense, there was no strategy all. No wonder all the generals who led the war(and the people who voted for the war in Congress), American people basically cannot recognize one. Worst leadership. These generals deserved to be under the historical carpet of uselessness and needlessness
How many years did the Vietnam war go for?
You have to win the war as quickly as possible with minimum casualty and as little consequences to the people as possible.
Profile Image for patrick Lorelli.
3,773 reviews39 followers
January 9, 2025
A true story about a man who goes on to become the most decorated special forces soldier in Vietnam. Takes you from his early years with his grandmother to enlisting in the Army to finally getting into the Green Berets. Then goes into the different people he met and fought with along with the different missions that they all went on. Most were with SOG but the author gives everyone from pilots to medical, just everyone. Some stories are funny and some are serious. Overall a very good book and worth the read.
45 reviews
June 4, 2025
This is an incredible story of a man who would become legend for his exploits in Viet Nam. He had to be one of the toughest dudes on the planet, yet able to keep his cool when things got very hot. Like most of us, not a perfect person, but a guy who you would like to have at your side when it hit the fan.
Profile Image for Dennis.
88 reviews36 followers
July 10, 2025
An interesting story of an American hero,this was an easy read but I believe the author took a few liberties. There are certain sequences that I don't believe happened the way they were told. Over all its a good story although not exceptionally well written. You need to learn about this man he's a great soldier
2 reviews
June 24, 2025
Reading this book was like learning that captain price is a real guy lol. The action scenes are crazy detailed and help fully immerse you when reading the book and the only bad thing about the book is that it ends tbh.
Profile Image for Don Paske.
1,140 reviews6 followers
May 23, 2025
Well written account of an amazing man's courage. What he did and endured in RVN defies comprehension.
4 reviews
June 6, 2025
Hero of heroes

The unreal REAL story of the most decorated soldier since WWII. Reads like a Captain America in real life. Unbelievable.
Profile Image for J.w. Larrick.
40 reviews1 follower
October 19, 2025
Heroics beyond description and unimaginable to mere mortals. Very engaging read and it made the experience of Colonel Howard understandable in the direst circumstances. God rest his soul.
Profile Image for Boco_read.
27 reviews
December 18, 2025
Holy cow this guy is the man. Got shot in the face and said put me back in coach.
Profile Image for RANGER.
318 reviews29 followers
December 18, 2025
Must-Read Biography of America's Most Decorated Soldier

Most Americans are unaware the most decorated American soldier in our history is Special Forces Vietnam Veteran, Robert Howard. This accolade is usually reserved for Audie Murphy, who attained this distinction during three years of service in WWII. But Robert Howard served during the Vietnam War and won his awards while assigned to the super-secret Studies and Observations Group (SOG) doing classified missions over-the-fence in Cambodia or Laos. These were the original "silent professionals" who stayed true to their non-disclosure agreements to speak nothing of their exploits until 20 years after the end of the Vietnam War. Finally, in the 1990s, former SOG soldiers John Plaster and John Stryker Meyer wrote their eponymous books giving names and faces to the secret warriors who did so much underappreciated work in that unpopular war.

Robert Howard stood out above them all. He was recommended for the Medal of Honor three times, received it on the third recommendation, and was wounded 14 times. Because he disdained awards and much of the records for SOG were destroyed at the end of the war, the Army literally lost track of just how many awards Howard received. He was believed to have exceeded Audie Murphy's record but has generally been called America's most decorated Green Beret, a title he winced at. He always felt guilty about such recognition because of all the fine soldiers who never made it home alive and others whose heroics never came to light. When Howard was asked about Audie Murphy, he is said to have told them, "That man [Murphy] was a hero, I was just a soldier." Howard was, indeed, a career soldier--enlisting in 1956, receiving a battlefield commission in Vietnam, and going on to command Ranger and SF units until his 1993 retirement.

Stephen L. Moore's well-written and researched book focuses on Howard's military career. There is biographical information about his early life, early influences, and post-Vietnam career, but they are not the detailed eye-witness accounts that make up the main part of this book. Since the book's focus and theme is centered on his wartime exploits, it has a somewhat hagiographical tone. Howard was a complicated man (he was quite religious, was married three times, and struggled with alcoholism and PTSD). But the picture that emerges from this book is of a hard-as-nails, no-nonsense professional, who fought like a tiger and never displayed fear when under fire. Despite his toughness, he cried at his unit's losses and went into a rage as the war came to a close and he realized all his battlefield achievements would not be able to prevent the war's disastrous loss.

As a former soldier, I found the most interesting thing about Howard was his professional humility and teachability which appeared to be genuine. The fact that, as a 31-year-old combat veteran of Special Forces, with three tours of 'Nam under his belt, numerous purple hearts and awards for heroism, he was still willing to attend US Army Ranger School in 1970 and be its honor graduate is something rather extraordinary. He also attended and passed the Special Forces Qualification Course later in his career, a school that did not exist in the early days of Vietnam era SF. He could have built his postwar career sitting on his military laurels and simply bypassed these schools (which are designed for young, relatively inexperienced leaders) but he wanted to earn his place as an instructor and commander among our nation's most elite warriors. This is uncommon.

This book is a fast-paced read and HIGHLY HIGHLY recommended.
Robert Howard's name should be known to all of our military servicemembers, his story should be taught in every high school, and no responsible student of warfare should be unaware of his contribution to our nation's rich military heritage. Enjoy!
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.