Here, at last, is the go-to book on a major, unique, and scandalously neglected feature of the Vietnam War: the organized international movement of American deserters. Paul Benedikt Glatz’s scholarship is meticulous, insightful, and well-balanced. His fluency in several languages allows him to explore—and bring to life—the battles swirling around the deserters in several nations. All future work on the Americans who deserted the Vietnam War will owe a great debt to this invaluable book.
— H. Bruce Franklin, professor emeritus, Rutgers University; author of Crash Course: From the Good War to the Forever War
Today, in the United States, there is a move to whitewash the tragedy, disaster, and criminality of the U.S. war against Vietnam. Vietnam’s Prodigal Heroes shows the viewpoint of soldiers who were actually there, as well as others who were at risk of being sent there and chose to desert. Glatz has left no stone unturned in his efforts to portray a realistic view of deserters, one not often presented to the general public. This book will help to defeat the sanctimonious pronouncements of today’s politicians.
— Robert Fantina, independent scholar; author of Desertion and the American Soldier 1776-2006
This is a great book, loaded with primary documentation, much of it French, German, and Swedish. Glatz locates the origins of military desertion during the war in Vietnam in Europe and then positions it within the larger matrix of antiwar activism. Had it been available, my own work over twenty years would be peppered with references to Vietnam’s Prodigal Heroes.
— Jerry Lembcke, associate professor emeritus, Holy Cross College; author of The Spitting Image
In his very well researched and balanced book, Paul Benedikt Glatz has made a most valuable contribution to the history of the anti-Vietnam War movement. With its publication, Vietnam's Prodigal Heroes becomes the essential source in understanding the complicated issue of U.S.military deserters during the war and what happened to them and why after the war's end.
— Melvin Small, Wayne State University; author of Antiwarriors: The Vietnam War and the Battle for America's Hearts and Minds
The American War in Vietnam was the most controversial war of aggression since the end of World War II. Deserters strike at the heart of the military-industrial complex. This transnational study is an important milestone towards understanding a major seachange in popular attitudes and militant actions to question authority.
— Gerd-Rainer Horn, The Paris Institute of Political Studies; author of The Spirit of '68: Rebellion in Western Europe and North America, 1956-1976
Paul Benedikt Glatz’s Vietnam's Prodigal Heroes is a deeply-researched, well-written analysis of the motivations and often courageous actions of American soldiers who expressed their opposition to the Vietnam War by deserting. Glatz has given us an important and nuanced addition to the scholarship of antiwar dissent during America’s most controversial war.
— Ralph Young, Temple University; author of Dissent: The History of an American Idea
In Vietnam’s Prodigal Heroes, Paul Benedikt Glatz focuses his attention on U.S. military desertion, one of the most controversial aspects of America’s Vietnam War. Based on extensive research, this sympathetic but judicious account portrays military desertion as an act of dissent, reviving and expanding the complex story of the deserter communities, their support networks, and the international dimensions of anti-Vietnam War dissent.
— Mitchell K. Hall, Central Michigan University; author of The Vietnam War
A fine work of scholarship that I heartily recommend.
— James Lewes, The GI Press Project; Rezensionen
This comprehensive volume focuses on deserters exiled in Europe, particularly France, Germany, and Sweden, with some attention to Russia and Japan. Glatz takes the reader through the changing climate for deserters, the legal issues they faced in each country, various anti-war organizations and individual activists, deserters' anti-war activities, and, finally, the amnesty debate in the US. The in-country deserters in Vietnam are not covered, which would be a volume by itself, and one partially told in other places. Covering a comprehensive, detailed, and somewhat dense subject, this book is well written, which makes it accessible to a wider audience beyond scholars. Its international perspective is a major contribution to the anti-war protest literature, and the extensive references to sources in multiple languages are impressive. Recommended. General readers through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
Paul Benedikt Glatz has written a scarcely imaginable book. Vietnam’s Prodigal Heroes captures the interplay of Europe-based organizations and individuals and governments and to some extent outlines the fluid circumstances of that volatile era. This framework and its documentation promise to stand up well as a contribution to the history of this important topic and period.
— Peace and Change