Combat and Campus: Writing Through War by Annette Langlois Grunseth and Sgt. Peter R. Langlois

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MWSA Review
Nearly fifty years after its peak, the Vietnam War still retains its reputation as the most turbulent and tragic of America’s military conflicts. It has produced a wide range of movies and books, many of which examine that darkness in highly-stylized ways. Combat and Campus takes a different route, however, one that is an effective complement to many notable works on Vietnam. It focuses on one soldier and his family, using the letters of Sgt. Peter Langlois during his deployment and the poetry of his sister Annette.

Langlois deployed in mid-1969 after the Tet Offensive had changed the tenor of the war and hardened American protests against it. His letters from in country are a vivid reminder of the horrors of jungle combat against a dug-in enemy and the shock felt by someone seeing those horrors for the first time. Yet what makes the story work are two other elements: pre-combat letters Langlois sent from his initial military training and poems/letters from other members of his family.

The initial letters from OCS show a new soldier who graciously looks past repetitive and pointless tasks, instead labeling the Army as “a real test of character” and growing “quite fond of Georgia” while training at the “beautifully landscaped” Fort Benning. His journalism degree resulted in a good sense for detail and an awareness of when to tell stories objectively versus when to pull back and reflect on his role in them. Things begin curdling even before Langlois leaves for Vietnam, however, and the book’s finest achievement is capturing an arc that begins with such good-naturedness and ends as far too many Vietnam experiences ultimately did.

Poetry can be difficult to objectively judge, but the inclusion of verse from Sgt. Langlois’s sister Annette accomplishes the important goal of providing insight into a family member’s parallel experience on a campus wracked by protests against the war her brother is fighting. Even the most visceral descriptions of war can become numbing, and the poetry (along with a smattering of letters to and from other people) keeps the depictions of combat from blurring together. Annette, who oversaw the process of publication, wisely left the largest chunk of poetry until the end where it can serve as a capstone to the overall story and a way of showing just how difficult these events were to process for everyone involved.

The awfulness of Vietnam is well-known and was increasingly referenced as post-9/11 military operations continued for nearly 20 years. But whether that comparison is apt is less important in many ways than the individual stories of the soldiers and families whose sacrifice is required for any type of war, just or unjust, quick or decades-long. This book does a fine job telling one of those stories.

Review by John McGlothlin (February 2022)
 

Author's Synopsis

An infantryman's riveting letters from Vietnam, preserved for fifty years by his family, share experiences of living the war that are honest, raw, and graphic. As a journalist and soldier with the 25th Infantry Division, riding armored personnel carriers into rice paddies, engaging in night time sweeps of the jungle, Sgt. Peter Langlois chronicles the smells, sights, and sounds during some of the darkest days of the war from 1968 - '69. He would return home to a nation still protesting the war in which his younger sister, Annette, had walked to class behind National Guardsmen marching across the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus. Their correspondence and her poetry offer a unique perspective of the war in Vietnam and social change happening at home. Together, they share what was learned and what was lost.

ISBN/ASIN: ISBN HARD COPY 978-1-940863-12-2, ISBN E-book: 978-1-940863-13-9

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 180