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Book Reviews of Born on the Fourth of July

Born on the Fourth of July
Born on the Fourth of July
Author: Ron Kovic
ISBN: 56706
Pages: 224
Rating:
  • Currently 2.5/5 Stars.
 1

2.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Pocket
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Born on the Fourth of July on + 34 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I picked this up after stumbling on the movie version on late-night cable. I always believe that the book is better and in this case it's true as well. This is a book that should be required reading for Americans, so that we can know what it is that we are part of when we send soldiers off to war. Kovic was a true patriot who volunteered for Vietnam -- what happened to him there and when he returned stateside makes for compelling, heart-breaking reading.
reviewed Born on the Fourth of July on + 10 more book reviews
Vietnam novel from which they made the movie. Powerful!
MyLikeIt avatar reviewed Born on the Fourth of July on + 450 more book reviews
I read this book while in college (let's just say that was over 20 years ago) and I've never forgotten it. Heartbreaking, infuriating, inspiring. About a thousand times more powerful than the film. Do read it, and require your teen children to read it, too.
reviewed Born on the Fourth of July on + 16 more book reviews
Ron Kovic had a typical blue-collar family, suburban childhood in the early post-World War II years, except for one thing: his birthday. As the title says, he was literally born on our nation's Independence Day. So every year the entire country celebrated his birthday. It made him quite proud.

A few weeks after his high school graduation, when the reality of his probable future as a low-level supermarket employee began to set in, Ron signed up for the Marines. The recruitment office was close to the supermarket where he worked, but even before that, he had been exposed to their seductive techniques of persuasion in his school. They wore impressive uniforms and made inspiring speeches to the male students, who were not exactly boys anymore but were also not quite men yet either and were only too ready to be inspired by talk of heroism and eternal victory.

Ron was sent to Vietnam and seriously wounded. He came home paralyzed from the chest down. This book is a record of his experiences there and following his return home, a "war hero" whose loss and and very real and urgent needs were dismissed and ignored by those who supposedly revered him and his service. He found it almost impossible to adjust to his disability and reconnect to civilian life, until he encountered the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. In the VVAW he finally found a group of people who spoke to his fear, his loneliness, and his anger, and helped him channel those negative feelings into positive action to prevent other young men from suffering as he did. I was at least as moved and inspired reading it as he probably was listening to those Marine recruiters so long ago.
reviewed Born on the Fourth of July on + 36 more book reviews
listing came up as hardcover - it really is a paperback.