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Carry Me Home

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In this powerful and poignant epic, Del Vecchio transports the soldiers of the Viet Nam experience to their final battlefield—the home front. 

High Meadow Farm, in the fertile hill country of central Pennsylvania, would be their salvation. In Viet Nam they had fought side by side, brothers in arms. Now in the face of personal tragedy and bureaucratic deception, they would create a more enduring allegiance, an alliance of the spirit and the soil. Carry Me Home is the remarkable story of their struggle to find each other and themselves, a saga spanning fifteen years—fifteen years lost in a wilderness called America.

In its scope, breadth, and brilliance, Carry Me Home is much more than a novel about Viet Nam and Viet Nam veterans. It is a testament to history and hope, to hometowns and homecomings, to love and loss, to faith and family. It is a novel about two decades in our collective lives and the cleansing of our spirit—an inspiring and unforgettable novel about America itself. 

“In this...final installment of his trilogy about America's war in Southeast Asia (The 13th Valley; For the Sake of All Living Things), Del Vecchio focuses on veterans who returned home in the late '60s only to find themselves viewed largely as lepers...the overall purpose of his powerful proletarian art demands such detail to underscore his characters' pain and, for a few, uplifting recovery.”  —Publishers Weekly

“Carry Me Home completes a trilogy begun by The 13th Valley, and deals, much like James Jones' Some Came Running, with veterans trying to adapt to civilian life....in the end they gain a frightening power from Del Vecchio's accretion of utterly authentic detail. And Wapinski, at least, comes to a hard-earned redemption through the example of one fine old man and a beautiful, communitarian idea.”  —Booklist

“Arresting, searing and shattering...the most eloquent novel ever to examine the American Viet Nam veteran and his return home to a nation that had failed him.”  —International Review

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Author's Note
Author’s NoteTHERE IS NO HECKLEY County in Pennsylvania. The name was taken from a gravestone: Heckley—50th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, Infantry, 1848–1910. There is no township of Mill Creek Falls, nor, to the best of my knowledge, has anyone in north central Pennsylvania called their farm High Meadow. The communities of Ridgewater, Rock Ridge, and Coal Hill are imaginary, as are the Mill Creek Falls subdivisions—Old Town, Old New Town, New New Town, Creek’s Bend, etc. There is no Veterans Administration and no State of Pennsylvania Veterans Medical Center in Rock Ridge. In California, no land exists between Sonoma and Marin counties. The city of San Martin, like Heckley County, is a figment of my imagination. Carry Me Home is the last installment of a trilogy about America’s Southeast Asia era. The 13th Valley (Bantam, 1982) is the story of American infantry combat in Viet Nam and an inquiry into the causes of war. For the Sake of All Living Things (Bantam, 1990) is the story of a Cambodian family from 1968 to 1979. The story explores the making of a g******e with emphasis on Communist factions, their actions, interactions, and ideologies, and their effects upon a people. Carry Me Home is the story of a medium-size aging mill town and the generation that grew up there during the Viet Nam War era. The title has been borrowed, with permission, from Marcus Leddy’s Carry Me Home album, a collection of songs for and about Viet Nam veterans (Blue Roan Records). I have attempted to keep major historical events and general background history accurate. Times and dates of some specific events, particularly non-news television programming, which occurred in the United States may have been altered. Certain films, TV shows, reviews, and critiques that are cited in the late 1970s and early 1980s did not appear until later. Personal and minor events are composites, built or extrapolated from interviews, conversations, and/or official records. The characters who peopled these areas in the sixties, seventies, and eighties are fictitious. Characters depicted from specific military units (i.e., Tony Pisano of the 2d Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 3d Marine Division) have not been based upon anyone who served in these units, though where unit actions are described I have attempted to be true to the history of that combat. Any resemblance to any person, living or deceased, is purely a matter of many people having shared similar experiences, held similar beliefs, exhibited similar behavior. However, some people do live by The Code. Part I Homecoming

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