Recollections of Vietnam is a raw, unflinching memoir drawn from the lived experience of an infantry soldier drafted into the U.S. Army in March 1966. From the brutal training grounds of Fort Polk's infamous Tiger Land to the suffocating jungles of Vietnam, this book captures the chaos, confusion, and camaraderie of war as few others can. Told across 23 gripping chapters many written in the dead of night over a span of decades this is not a sanitized history. It is memory clawing its way back into the light. The author, a 100% disabled veteran, reflects on his tour with searing honesty. These stories were often written after nightmares, insomnia, or flashbacks. Some come like confessions; others like angry jokes from the edge. His voice is unique, mixing dark humor, soldier’s slang, and a stylized truth that cuts deeper than clean prose ever could. Intentional misspellings like “air farce,” or absurdities like “quadrillion” casualties, serve to reinforce the madness of war and the disconnect between soldiers and the bureaucracies that sent them. In “Jungle Trail,” one of the author’s most harrowing and beloved chapters, we’re taken on a patrol through tangled terrain, sweat pouring, nerves fraying, every step a gamble. In “Escape and Evasion 4,” the reader is thrown back into stateside training where future grunts are pushed past their limits in a brutal simulation meant to break them before the enemy ever gets a chance. This isn’t just about firefights and foxholes. It’s about the mental scars that outlast the medals. In one chapter, the author describes his struggle with drugs, the dragon of PTSD perched on his chest in the quiet hours. In another, he tells of walking out into a monsoon, just to keep from losing his mind. These are the moments most war stories leave out but here, they’re the heart of the book. Scattered throughout are reflections on comrades lost, absurd encounters, moments of strange beauty, and the weight of survival. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial, known as "The Wall," appears not just as a physical monument, but as a psychic wound the mirror where survivors see themselves reflected in the names of the dead. Rare images from a “Playboy Club” set up by GIs in Vietnam and haunting snapshots from the aftermath of the 1999 Texas A&M bonfire tragedy, which affected the author deeply. These visuals bring added depth to a book already overflowing with feeling. Though deeply personal, Recollections of Vietnam speaks to a whole generation of men who went to war as boys and came home changed in ways they couldn’t explain. This book is for them. For those who never made it back. For those still fighting long after the shooting stopped.