A “vividly told” Vietnam War combat diary shedding light on the Marine Corps pilots who brought soldiers home and went back for more (Booklist).
Every day, every mission, he took the war to the enemy’s heart. Only his quick wit and steely nerves could bring him through alive.
As a Marine pilot in Vietnam, Col. Bob Stoffey led a life that was constantly under siege. Flying SAR—Search and Rescue—helicopter missions at treetop level over enemy-held territory, he quickly learned how to dodge raging storms of enemy fire—and how to fight back with deadly accuracy.
Volunteering for the most dangerous air missions of the Vietnam conflict, Col. Stoffey later came back for more: taking on a second tour of duty as a forward air controller who directed naval gunfire, artillery, and thunderous air strikes from the cockpit of his OV-10 Bronco. Saving men from certain death, flying at impossibly low levels, Stoffey used his M-60 machine guns and 2.75-inch rockets—and he always shot to kill.
In this remarkable memoir, Bob Stoffey chronicles his four-year-long war—and brings to life the special exhilaration of flying into heart-stopping danger and coming back alive.
Includes eight pages of heroic photographs.
Col. Bob Stoffey was born in Coaldale, Pennsylvania, and graduated from Pennsylvania State University. He served as a Marine Corps pilot for twenty-five years, having flown twenty-four different types of aircraft worldwide. His many military decorations include the Marine Corps Medal for Personal Heroism, two Distinguished Flying Crosses, and twenty-five Air Medals. He retired in 1979 and now lives in Carlsbad, California, with his wife.