
A Filthy Way to Die
Collected Memories of the Vietnam War
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Ed Linz

This title uses virtual voice narration
About this listen
The horrific losses were not limited to the 58,000 Americans who lost their lives and over 300,000 others who were wounded, but included three million Vietnamese (many of whom were innocent civilians) and countless Laotians and Cambodians.
Linz presents background information explaining how the United States became involved in a decades-long diplomatic slippery slope leading to American Marines coming ashore at Da Nang in early 1965, just prior to his class graduating from the Naval Academy. He describes how each officer, many of whom could not locate Vietnam on a map when entering the Academy in 1961, ended up fighting a frustrating, and deadly, war halfway around the world. Nine of these classmates died during service in Vietnam, some following capture by the enemy. It was indeed a filthy way to die.
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Overall
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Performance
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In 1965, Hank Tucker and his Brother Toby were out of draft deferments when they discovered an AFL/CIO poster in the union hiring hall advertising a Navy enlistment program offering advanced enlisted paygrades to construction men with extensive experience in the trades and heavy equipment. Just sign up for a thirty month enlistment and they could enter the Navy Seabees as instant petty officers. At that point, joining one of the services was the only way they could avoid getting drafted and joining the Navy sounded like the best deal in town. No guns. No foxholes. No battles. It didn't ...
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Solid
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What listeners say about A Filthy Way to Die
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Susan A. Major
- 12-03-24
The horrible conditions our navy endured
The virtual reading was just awful. The mispronunciations and gaps between phrases. Wonderful stories partially tyluined by virtual reader
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- Croaky
- 01-11-25
AI narration is overly distracting...story is good!
Bad news first: I don't know if I have listened to a book that was so weighed down by its AI narration. I can usually muddle through the AI, but I think this unfortunately is an extreme example of poor AI narration.
It is terribly distracting in the AI stumbles over the simplest words such as "below", pronouncing it "bellow." U.S.N.A., the naval academy is pronounced "yewsnah." Dumb, Amazon. If you are going to make us supper through this artificial narration, at least don't make it terrible.
The story is pretty interesting. It is very similar to A Long Gray Line, as it focuses on a particular year of graduates from military academies. If you are familiar with Vietnam War history, you may learn a little thing or two here, but there are no big (or small) revelations to be certain. It is a series of personal account accounts and those accounts are general in nature...too much so, I think. The book could have been made much better had more time been taken to dig deeper into the stories told by each of these brave men.
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- Michael D. Stuart
- 04-05-24
Mispronunciation of towns, regions, some terms
Good review of the history. Interesting insight into commissioning, choices, and duties of Annapolis graduates. This is the third AI voice book I have heard. It should be possible to train the program to differentiate the voice of the author from that of the interviewees. The biggest issue for me was the jarring effect of mispronunciation. Hearing the city of Hue pronounced as the characteristic of color was as irritating as nails on a chalkboard. Surely a programmer could adjust the pronunciation.
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- Leslie Bruhn
- 03-23-25
virtual reader woes
Amazing collection of personal histories. The virtual reader let them down. The reader is not correctly programmed to read acronyms and abbreviations. It is distracting in military books as there are so many of each commonly used.
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