| 1 2 3 4 5 Next |
Up Country
There is a name carved into the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C., of an American army lieutenant whose death is shrouded in mystery. The authorities have reason to believe that he was not killed by the enemy, or by friendly fire; they suspect he was murdered. At first, Paul Brenner, himself a Vietnam vet, isn't interested in investigating the case. After his forced retirement from the army's Criminal Investigation Division, he has adapted to the life of a civilian with a comfortable pension. Then his old boss, Karl Hellmann, summons him to the Vietnam Memorial to call in a career's worth of favors. Hellmann tells Brenner of the circumstances surrounding the officer's death, and gives him this much to go on: The incident happened over three decades ago in Vietnam; the only evidence is a recently discovered letter written by an enemy soldier describing an act of shocking violence. The name of the North Vietnamese soldier is known, but not his present whereabouts, or even if he is alive or dead. Brenner's assignment: Return to Vietnam and find the witness. The addendum: The mission is very important to the U.S. Army. Brenner's the ideal man for the job. And it's in his best interest that he doesn't know what this case is really about. Reluctantly, Brenner begins a strange journey that unearths his own painful memories of Vietnam and leads him down a trail as dangerous as the ones he walked a lifetime ago as a young infantryman. From sultry, sinful Saigon, where he meets beautiful American expatriate Susan Weber, to the remote, forbidding wilderness of up-country Vietnam, he will follow a trail of lies, betrayal, and murder-and uncover an explosive, long-buried secret. Filled with intrigue and espionage, romance and seduction, action and adventure-as well as the author's patented, subversive wit-UP COUNTRY is, above all, about what happens when men fight in wars and how it changes them forever.
- From: Amazon
- Posted: Sep-21-2009
Up Country is two thumbs up
This is an interesting look at the Vietnam war forty years later. Intriguing and manipulative woman showing up on his secret operation to take place throughout the Vietnamese countryside changes the outlook and outcome. Seemingly innocent beginnings twist to a new and dangerous story. Keeps...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Sep-19-2009
Up Country
This is a wonderful story with engaging characters and excellent character development. DeMilles ability to describe the physical setting adds interest and makes the story come to life!
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Aug-18-2009
Ex-Viet Vet Couldn't put it down, literally!
Demille does it again reintroducing Paul Brenner into Vietnam years following his service to investigate the possibility of a murder that was never solved. Paul Brenner is the epitome Leroy Jethro "Gibbs" from NCIS who has never resolved ( and rightfully so) the hatred he has for the North...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Aug-05-2009
Appreciation for Nelson Demille's writing style and content
With the exception of "The Gate House" I have now read all of his books. His main characters all have similar traits and this to me is the main attraction of his storys. Suspicious of people in authority, their motives and devious methods to achieve dubious objectives they speak their minds in a...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Mar-17-2009
Story-line was not new but learned about Viet Nam
Much of the plot is a re-run, but I had big Google maps over all my computer screens while I plotted progress up and down roads in Viet Nam. For those of us ignorant about either the war or the country, the book was full of interesting information.
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jan-22-2009
Up Country Review
Excellent book, would recommend to anyone, but especially to Vietnam vets. Story line was terrific and the geographical depiction was entirely accurate.
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jan-17-2009
DeMille shows Vietnam through a US veteran's eyes
DeMille's detailed descriptions of not only the Vietnam countryside, but the opinions and feelings of a veteran are so real and descriptive. His persuasive nature sucks you into feeling what the main character, Paul Brenner, is feeling. The humor and sarcasm that Brenner's character delivers is...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jan-01-2009
Beyond the Vietnam War and into future
This may not be in the most accepted style of Vietnam literature, but it nonetheless is highly entertaining and informative both about the War and the current situation in the People's Republic. The scene setting is excellent and I felt I was there every step of the way and turn of the motorcycle...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Nov-13-2008
Inferior sequel
Nelson DeMille is hit-or-miss from my perspective; his John Corey novels deliver, but he occasionally writes a mediocre book (Up Country and Spencerville). This sequel to "The General's Daughter" is okay, but it's mostly dialogue concerning Paul Brenner's tours of Vietnam. He is sent on a recon...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Nov-01-2008
I Read This Book In Saigon....A Real Pageturner
While on my third trip to Vietnam in 2003 with my (Vietnamese) wife, I picked this up from the used book store on De Tham Street in Saigon (the one next to the corner cafe if you know De Tham Street). A friend had recommended it to me via email.Up Country turned out to be one of the best reads in...
Read full review | Report as inappropriateMoreStores
SimilarProducts
-
A Touch of Dead (Sookie Stackhouse)
-
The Reader (Movie Tie-in Edition) (Vintage International)
-
Tempt Me at Twilight (Hathaways, Book 3)
-
Sookie Stackhouse 8-copy Boxed Set (Sookie Stackhouse/True Blood)
-
A Place of Greater Safety: A Novel
-
Life of Pi
-
Complete Vampire Chronicles (Interview with the Vampire, The Vampire Lestat, The Queen of the Damned, The Tale of the body Thief)
-
A Wicked Lord at the Wedding
-
Deception Point
-
Grave Sight (Harper Connelly Mystery, No. 1)







