Up Country, Nelson DeMille’s 2003 novel about the Vietnam War is one of the best written on that topic. His recent short story, Rendezvous, distills that experience down to the essence: discomfort, mental stress, fear, pain, eroticism and death, without any of the politics, strategy, travelogue and lyricism that comes along with the 880 page novel. It is a suspenseful, gripping, scary and bloody tale. An Army Lieutenant leads a patrol through the Vietnam jungles during the height of the war. As if the discomforts of the hot, humid, buggy and snake infested equatorial jungle are not enough, they are stalked by a soldier’s worst nightmare, a female sniper who is systematically picking off the members of the patrol. The Lieutenant tries to lead his team to a rendezvous with a chopper that will fly them to safety before she kills them all. DeMille keeps the suspense and the discomfort at a high level throughout the story. It took me 45 minutes to read the story and I could not put it down until I was finished, but relieved that it was over. Rendezvous packs a lot of emotion in a very short space.