
Stingers
Vietnam War - Helicopter Gunships
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Fred Allen

This title uses virtual voice narration
About this listen
Experience intense combat from the Crew Chief/Door Gunner’s seat in a Stinger helicopter gunship.The author presents this book based on his personal experiences in the Vietnam War as a 18-year-old gunship Crew Chief/Door Gunner. He wants the reader to experience what it is like to kill dozens of enemy combatants and collaterally, non-combatants. How to live with the frequent near-death experiences and the constant high probability of being killed. Endure the frequent loss of fellow soldiers in combat. Witness a young soldier losing all sense of humanity as he transforms into a warrior that thrives on killing.
The real life incidents portrays a platoon of Huey UH-1C gunships, called the “Stingers” and its elite, motivated crews. As a component of U.S. Army assault helicopter companies, the “guns” protected the Huey “slicks” as they inserted or extracted infantry troops from landing and pick up zones. The gunships often conducted “search and kill” missions and provided lifesaving protection to infantry units threatened by enemy forces.
Gunship crews were among the most lethal pilots, crew chiefs and door gunners in Army aviation. Some gunship crew chiefs had over 400 hundred personal kills. An intense warrior mentality was crucial to mission success and survival. Killing was a way of life in the guns.
One of the most decorated and experienced aviation combat units in the Vietnam War was the Stingers’ parent, the 116th Assault Helicopter Company, known as the “Hornets”. Follow the operational strategy as Army Command reassigns the Hornets from III Corps, near Saigon to Chu Lai in I Corps under the command of the 23rd Infantry Division, known as “Americal”. Experience the rapid increase of lethal enemy encounters. Americal imposed severe constraints on the Stingers in the aftermath of the My Lai massacre. The Stingers and slick platoons of the 116th, fight on.
The young combat veteran becomes “short” with just a few months left in his tour of duty. Americal reassigns the 116th to Quang Tri, one of the most dangerous places in Vietnam. The mission was to support the Laotian operation, Lam Son 719. Quang Tri was less than fifteen miles from North Vietnam. The rocket attacks on Quang Tri base camp were relentless. Soldiers became shell-shocked. War memories would haunt them for the rest of their lives.
The day finally came. The young warrior boards the Freedom Bird for the flight home. As the eastbound airliner crossed the border of South Vietnam, the returning soldiers break out into celebratory yells and relief. The onboard jubilation is short-lived. War damaged soldiers experience sudden decompression from the constant lethal threat endured for months on end. Soldiers begin to emotionally breakdown. The civilian flight attendants rush to calm the suffering heroes.
War news headlines are articulated in real-time to frame the author’s story.
The author portrays a balance of bravado militarism with the constant dilemma combat soldiers faced in Vietnam. It is a heroic endeavor to believe in upholding nationalistic pride and high principles of duty, honor and country. But when combat soldiers lose America’s support; when military morale and leadership falters; when the cause for war becomes questionable; a soldier has to find his own way to persevere and survive.
Join the author and deploy on your tour in the Vietnam War.
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What listeners say about Stingers
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- Ben Stewart
- 01-02-25
Honest book
Good book -worth listening to or reading it - it's very candid & revealing prospective on the war. Welcome Home Specialist Allen!
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- Ashley Broberg
- 05-01-24
overall good listen and an interesting view of Vietnam
The automated neration doesn't always get the words right but overall good book and easy to figure out what was meant
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- Ora
- 05-19-24
Highly recommend
incredible and intense. Well written and very educational. Thank you for your service. Look forward to more from this author.
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- Christine Hicks
- 08-03-24
Singers is good. Virtual voice getting better
I enjoyed the parts of the story where the author discusses his personal experiences in Vietnam. I was not nearly as interested in the historical facts that took up much of the book. Virtual voice is getting better, but there were still long periods of unexplained pauses, and also few times where the book for some reason would simply say, “audio paused for one minute.”
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- Anonymous User
- 03-15-25
I would perfer a real person reading.
It was of the most real stories that I have listened to about the Vietnam experience.
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- Maxpower214
- 09-10-24
A.I. narrator sucks.
I liked the story, but the narrator just doesn’t know how to pronounce certain words or acronyms right. Emissions are needed at times but are lacking.
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- S. A. James
- 04-23-24
Pretty standard ‘Nam memoir fare
Author and content: The book was decent enough. As far as style, content, etc. it’s more or less your average soldier in Vietnam type of stuff with various interesting vignettes. Fairly early on you realize the authors tour of duty affected him deeply and as the chapters go on that comes more and more to the forefront. I don’t know that I would go through the book a second time, but I don’t regret reading it the first time. It’s worth a listen/read if you’ve got some free time, especially if you got it on sale like I did.
Narration: Appropriate for the subject matter. Narrators voice kind of complimented the material. As with most audibles, this book was better listened to at ~2x speed because of how slow the regular narration is. Narrator talking speed is my only major complaint and that’s a consistent grievance of mine across just about every book on here that I’ve listened to. I really wish publishers would quit padding out the listening time and just have narrators talk at a normal pace.
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- DJ5400
- 05-03-24
Good book with a few issues with Virtual Voice
I really liked the book. It was interesting to follow the Author through his training and tour in Vietnam. I have a lot of respect for our troops that served there. Someone needs to do a little quality control checking on the Virtual Voice narration of the book. Several times (Chapter 17, 20, etc) the narrator says “The narration with pause for 60 (or 20) seconds and then there’s a dead spot in the narration for that length of time. Also, there were some very long pauses at the end of chapters, where I thought my device had stopped working. Hopefully someone can address these issues and upload a clean copy of the narration since it is actually a good book to listen to.
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- Princess of the King of Kings
- 10-10-24
Story was good. Not a fan of Virtual Voice.
The Virtual Voice narration was too robotic. There were too many awkward pauses and instances of odd inflection. I much prefer human narration.
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- Bryan James
- 01-05-25
Good book to read or listen to
A clearly honest and well organized statement of occurrences. I highly recommend it to anyone.
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