March 21 at Neill Public Library
Pullman author to read
from ‘short, crazy’ Vietnam War memoir
Julie Titone will read from the memoir that she co-authored with the late artist Grady Myers, “Boocoo Dinky Dow: My short, crazy Vietnam War,” on March 21 in Pullman.
Julie Titone will read from the memoir that she co-authored with the late artist Grady Myers, “Boocoo Dinky Dow: My short, crazy Vietnam War,” on March 21 in Pullman.
The event will take place at
5:30 p.m. at Neill Public Library, 210 N. Grand Ave.
Joining her in reading from
the book will be Washington State University professor of English and Vietnam
veteran Victor Villanueva Jr.
The book takes its title from soldiers’ slang pronunciation of “beaucoup dien cai dau,” meaning very crazy. A reviewer for the Vietnam Veterans of America called the memoir “Lucid ... well-told ... beautifully illustrated ... infused with humor.” Washington State Magazine praised it as "Part ‘M*A*S*H’ and part ‘Full Metal Jacket.’ ”
Myers was an aimless Idaho teenager, when, desperate for troops, the U.S. Army overlooked his extreme nearsightedness and transformed him into Hoss, an M-60 machine gunner. In “Boocoo Dinky Dow,” he recounts his military initiation at Fort Lewis, Wash. He describes the intensity of Vietnam, where an old man carrying a bundle of sticks posed a moral dilemma and where his explosives-happy comrades in Charlie Company sometimes posed the greatest danger.
The book takes its title from soldiers’ slang pronunciation of “beaucoup dien cai dau,” meaning very crazy. A reviewer for the Vietnam Veterans of America called the memoir “Lucid ... well-told ... beautifully illustrated ... infused with humor.” Washington State Magazine praised it as "Part ‘M*A*S*H’ and part ‘Full Metal Jacket.’ ”
Myers was an aimless Idaho teenager, when, desperate for troops, the U.S. Army overlooked his extreme nearsightedness and transformed him into Hoss, an M-60 machine gunner. In “Boocoo Dinky Dow,” he recounts his military initiation at Fort Lewis, Wash. He describes the intensity of Vietnam, where an old man carrying a bundle of sticks posed a moral dilemma and where his explosives-happy comrades in Charlie Company sometimes posed the greatest danger.
Myers returned from four
months in Vietnam with a Purple Heart and spent the rest of his Army career recovering
from his war wounds. He went on to a professional art career. His employers
included the Idaho Statesman in Boise, the Spokesman-Review in Spokane and the
Idaho Panhandle National Forests in Coeur d’Alene. He died in 2011.
Myers and Titone were newspaper
colleagues when they produced the first manuscript of his memoir in the late
1970s. They eventually married, had a son, divorced yet remained friends. When
he became bedridden several years ago, they revived the manuscript to give him
a project to work on. This time, they added Myers’ drawings that had become
part of the National Veterans Art Museum collection.
Titone has worked as a
journalist and university communicator. Her writing and photography have
appeared in regional, national and international publications; her essays have
been published in three college textbooks and two literary collections. Her
novel, Deadline Affairs, was recorded by Books in Motion.
For more information, visit: www.shortcrazyvietnam.com.
For more information, visit: www.shortcrazyvietnam.com.
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