Nathan's Hope

 A tribute to IC's brother Nathan Alexander who passed away from leukemia on May 24, 2009. Emily Ham was one of his favorite students and most talented writers. A memorial service is being held at Troy University at 5pm on August 24, 2009.

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The Day the World Ended

This has been taken down due to complaints about the portion referring to the mother of Nathan's child and the possibility she might see it.

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Sometimes, the good die young

 A tribute to IC's brother Nathan Alexander.

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R.I.P. - William Nathan Alexander

Nathan's obituary

Video of prelude to Nathan's Memorial Service

Video of main part of service with family and friends speaking

Video of end of service with dad speaking and bagpipes

Eulogy from mom and dad

Pics from Memorial Service at Troy U. on Aug. 24, 2009 (not complete yet) [...]

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Review of Whitewash/Blackwash: Myths of the Vietnam War

Most scholarship on Vietnam has focused on American hubris and defeat, ignoring the role of the South Vietnamese armed services while overemphasizing the role of the North Vietnamese desire to unify their country. Recently, Vietnam Veterans are beginning to challenge this narrow view with their own written accounts of the Vietnam war.

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Imagining the Vietnam Veteran

Never has a war inspired the imagination (lurid and otherwise) of so many Americans, and yet the lives of the actual soldiers interested so few.  A review of B.G. Burkett and Glenna Whitley's Stolen Valor and Gerald Nicosia's Home to War.

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Honor Bound: American Prisoners of War in Southeast Asia 1961-1973

This book tells the story of every American POW in Indochina, detailing everything from the torture they endured to their communication of tapping and methods of resistance.

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Review of M.I.A. or Mythmaking in America

In his book M.I.A. or Mythmaking in America, H. Bruce Franklin attempts to establish that the POW "myth" was created by the Nixon White House in order to extend the Vietnam War. His first speculations about potentially unaccounted for servicemen suggest that they may have been deserters who formed new families, got involved with drug trafficking, or helped lead attacks on U.S. forces.

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The Vietnam War and the Resurrection of the Dead

The Vietnam war will not be over until less attention is given to resurrecting the ghosts of the past, and more to those who solider on and carry the very real burdens of America’s South East Asian war.

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Muck Ado About Nothing

The strange new respect for Vietnam veterans is temporary, only a brevet promotion, the result of partisan opportunity and media obsession. Those who hanker for that sort of attention should relish their fifteen minutes of respectability.

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