Vietnam War Bibliography:

The Media

Azadeh Aalai, "Media Depictions of the Vietnam and Iraq Wars." Ph.D. dissertation, Applied Social Psychology, Loyola University of Chicago, 2008. AAT 3340150. xii, 224 pp. Looks at The New York Times and Time magazine, 1964-68 and 2003-7. After a brief skim, my reaction was negative, but the analytic approach is different enough from the ones to which I am accustomed that I cannot be sure my negative reaction was justified.

Joel Achenbach, "Did the news media, led by Walter Cronkite, lose the war in Vietnam?" Washington Post, May 25, 2018.

Anthony A. Adams, "A Study of Veteran Viewpoints on TV Coverage of the Vietnam War," Journalism Quarterly, 54:2 (Summer 1977), pp. 248-53.

Joseph W. Alsop, with Adam Platt, "I've Seen the Best of It": Memoirs. New York: Norton, 1992. 495 pp. Alsop, a Cold-War liberal, was a very influential syndicated columnist. Unfortunately this book deals mainly with events up to 1963, although there is still enough to be interesting about events from 1964 onward, when Alsop was one of the most important hawks in American journalism, first pushing very hard (enough so to annoy Lyndon Johnson) for escalation of the Vietnam War, and then asserting very loudly that the United Stats was winning the war.

Robert Sam Anson, War News: A Young Reporter in Indochina. New York: Simon & Schuster: 1989. pb New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990. 317 pp. Anson went to Indochina as a reporter for Time in 1969.

Michael J. Arlen, Living Room War.  New York: Viking, 1969.  242 pp.  I believe this is a collection of pieces originally published in the New Yorker.

Michael J. Arlen, The View from Highway 1: Essays on Television.  New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1976.  293 pp. A collection on of essays, some dealing with the coverage of the Vietnam War, originally published in the New Yorker between September 1974 and December 1975.

Peter Arnett, Live from the Battlefield: From Vietnam to Baghdad, 35 Years in the World's War Zones. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994. 463 pp. About half of this excellent book is devoted to the many years Arnett spent covering Vietnam for the Associated Press; he was there almost continuously from 1962 to 1970, and intermittently thereafter until 1975.

Peter Arnett, Saigon Has Fallen. New York: Rosetta Press, 2015. 224 pp. This shorter memoir deals only with the years when Arnett was covering Vietnam.

Peter Arnett, We're Taking Fire: A Reporter's View of the Vietnam War, Tet and the Fall of LBJ. New York: Associated Press, 2018. x, 301 pp. Covers the Vietnam War from the early 1960s through 1968; there is not as much emphasis on 1968 as the title would lead one to expect.

Peter Arnett, "The National Liberation Front," Current History, February 1969, pp. 82-87.

Peter Arnett, "The ARVN: Prospects for the Army of South Vietnam," Current History, December 1969, pp. 333-38.

Peter Arnett, "How Will the Vietnam War End? Speculations of a War Correspondent," War/Peace Report, June/July 1971, pp. 3-5.

Peter Arnett, "Tet Coverage: A Debate Renewed", Columbia Journalism Review, January/February 1978, pp. 44-47. A review of Braestrup's Big Story, pointing out that the generalizations about media misbehavior in this book are not well supported by the details.

Peter Arnett, Joe Galloway, Zalin Grant, Wallace Terry, and Stanley Karnow, "Reporters On The Front Lines: Careers Forged In Danger", in The VVA Veteran, October/November 2000. Transcript of a panel session at an April 6-8, 2000, symposium "Rendezvous with War," sponsored by Vietnam Veterans of America and the College of William and Mary. There are brief introductory remarks by moderator Marc Leepson.

James Aronson, The Press and the Cold War. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1970. viii, 308 pp. Includes considerable discussion of the reaction to Harrison Salisbury's reporting from North Vietnam.

Laura Longley Babb, Of the Press, by the Press, for the Press (and others, too); A Critical Study of the Inside Workings of the News Business, from the News Pages, Editorials, Columns, and Internal Staff Memos of The Washington Post. Washington, D.C.: Washington Post, 1974. vi, 246 pp.

Karen M. Bacus, "The Rhetoric of the Press: Newspaper Treatment of Richard Nixon's Major Statements on Vietnam, 1969-1970." Ph.D. dissertation, Speech, University of Kansas, 1974. 159 pp. 75-17568. Deals with the New York Times and Washington Post. Very critical of the New York Times.

George Arthur Bailey, "The Vietnam War According to Chet, David, Walter, Harry, Peter, Bob, Howard and Frank: A Content Analysis of Journalistic Performance by the Network Television Evening News Anchormen, 1965-1970.". Ph.D. dissertation, Journalism, University of Wiscondin - Madison, 1974. AAT 7321142. xiv, 435 pp.

George Arthur Bailey, "Television news, the Vietnam War, and the American audience: a case study of the General Loan story." M.A. thesis, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 1970.

Hanson W. Baldwin (1903-1991), a graduate of Annapolis, was the military editor of the New York Times from 1942 to 1968. He remained very hawkish on Vietnam when others at that newspaper were becoming less supportive of the war.

Matthias Bandtel and Jens Tenscher, "Front Cover Imagery and the Social Construction of the Vietnam War: A Case Study of LIFE Magazine's Iconology and its Impact on Visual Discourse," Journal of War & Culture Studies 7:2 (May 2014), pp. 100-118.

Tad Bartimus, Denby Fawcett, Jurate Kazickas, Edith Lederer, Ann Bryan Mariano, Anne Morrissy Merick, Laura Palmer, Kate Webb, and Tracy Wood, War Torn: Stories of War from the Women Reporters who Covered Vietnam. New York: Random House, 2002. xxvii, 291 pp. Introduction by Gloria Emerson. I have seen this listed as having been edited by Jurate Kazickas, but the book simply lists that authors in alphabetical order, with none singled out as editor. There is a lot of emphasis on the last years of the war.

Milton J. Bates, et al., eds., Reporting Vietnam. New York: Library of America, 1998. Part One, American Journalism 1959-1969. xiii, 858 pp. Part Two, American Journalism 1969-1975. xii, 857 pp. An anthology made up mostly of substantial articles, with Michael Herr's book Dispatches also included.

James L. Baughman, Henry R. Luce and the Rise of the American News Media. Boston: Twayne, 1987. x, 264 pp.

Gordon Baxter, 13/13. Vietnam: Search and Destroy. Cleveland: World Publishing Co., 1967. 120 pp. Introduction by Chet Huntley. Photos and commentary by a journalist who usually worked on radio and TV in Beaumont, Texas. Both Baxter's text and Huntley's introduction are strongly pro-war.

Elizabeth Becker, You Don't Belong Here: How Three Women Rewrote the Story of War. New York: PublicAffairs (Hachette), 2021. Kate Webb, Catherine Leroy, and Frances FitzGerald.

Edward Behr, Bearings: A Foreign Correspondent's Life behind the Lines.  New York: Viking, 1978.  xvii, 316 pp.  Behr became Newsweek's Hong Kong bureau chief in 1966.  Pp. 239-87 give a quite interesting description of his experiences covering Vietnam, intermittently from 1967 to 1971.

Nicholas O. Berry, Foreign Policy and the Press: An Analysis of The New York Times' Coverage of US Foreign Policy. New York: Greenwood, 1990. xix, 164 pp.

Henry S. Bradsher, The Dalai Lama's Secret and Other Reporting Adventures: Stories from a Cold War Correspondent. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2013. x, 312 pp. Only two fairly short chapters deal with Bradsher's reporting from Indochina, in the late stages of the Vietnam War.

Peter Braestrup, Big Story: How the American Press and Television Reported and Interpreted the Crisis of Tet 1968 in Vietnam and Washington, 2 vols. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1977. xxxvii, 740, x, 706 pp. One-volume abridgment New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983. xviii, 613 pp. Updated one-volume abridgement (there is a new Introduction, and four pages of additions and corrections at the end of the volume) Novato, CA: Presidio, 1994. xviii, 613 pp. A very detailed study, with great amounts of documentation. Some of Braestrup's generalizations about the misdeeds of the media are not supported by the details he presents. See hostile reviews by Peter Arnett and Noam Chomsky, listed in this section.

Peter Braestrup, Battle Lines: Report of the Task Force on the Military and the Media. New York: Brookings Institution/Priority Press Publications, 1985. vi, 178 pp. I would expect this to say a good bit about Vietnam, but I haven't seen it.

Fred Branfman, "The Media in Vietnam: Lessons for the Future." Undated (probably 1975, perhaps 1976), unpublished paper. 15 pp. The text has been placed on-line in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University. Argues that the media were much too inclined to accept the U.S. government viewpoint on Vietnam.

Carol Brightman, Writing Dangerously: Mary McCarthy and Her World. New York: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1992. xix, 714 pp.

Alan Brinkley, The Publisher: Henry Luce and His American Century. New York: Knopf, 2010. 531 pp.

David Brinkley, David Brinkley : 11 Presidents, 4 Wars, 22 Political Conventions, 1 Moon Landing, 3 Assassinations, 2,000 Weeks of News and Other stuff on Television and 18 Years of Growing up in North Caroliona. New York: Knopf/Random House, 1995. 273 pp. Brinkley was the very influential co-anchor of the NBC News until 1970.

Douglas Brinkley, Cronkite. New York: Harper (HarperCollins), 2012. xi, 819 pp. By far the most complete biography of the very influential CBS News anchorman.

Jinx C. Broussard, African American Foreign Correspondents [A History]. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2013. x, 268 pp. The chapter on the Vietnam War is pp. 174-93.

Malcolm W. Browne, Muddy Boots and Red Socks: A Reporter's Life. New York: Times Books, 1993. xv, 366 pp. Memoirs of a very good journalist who covered the early part of the war for AP.

Peter Brush, "What Really Happened at Cam Ne?" Vietnam Magazine, August 2003. Reporting by Morley Safer, of CBS, showing the 1/9 Marines burning peasant homes in the village of Cam Ne, near Danang, caused a major controversy. The text has been placed online at HistoryNet.com.

Edward Burton, The Swedish-American Press and the Vietnam War. Göteborg, Sweden: Department of History, University of Göteborg, 2003. x, 324 pp. A doctoral thesis, published by the university that granted the degree. So far I have only found time to skim this, but it looks good.

Susan and Bill Buzenberg, eds., Salant, CBS, and the Battle for the Soul of Broadcast Journalism: The Memoirs of Richard S. Salant. Boulder: Westview, 1999. xvii, 326 pp. Salant was President of CBS News from 1961 to 1964 and 1966 to 1979. He died in 1993, leaving behind a huge manuscript, which the Buzenbergs spent several years revising and editing down to manageable size. The full text is available online to paid subscribers of Questia.

W. Joseph Campbell, Getting it Wrong: Ten of the Greatest Misreported Stories in American Journalism. The chapter "Debunking the 'Cronkite Moment'" (pp. 85-100) argues convincingly that Walter Cronkite's famous broadcast on the Tet Offenisve did not have as great an impact as has often been suggested, and in particular that Lyndon Johnson's supposed reaction to it ("If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost Middle America" and many other variations) is apocryphal.

Louis J. Campomenosi, III, "The 'New York Times' editorial coverage of the American involvement in Vietnam, 1945-1965: A case study to test the Huntington thesis of the existence of an oppositional press in the United States" (Ph.D. dissertation, Tulane, Political Science, 1994), 710 pp. DA9503868.

CBS Television Network, "The Changing War in Indochina: The Widening War in Laos and Cambodia." Documentary broadcast February 16, 1971, with Charles Collingwood as the chief correspondent. Transcript printed in Congressional Record, March 1, 1971, pp. S2167-S2171. The text has been placed online in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University.

Dickey Chapelle, What's a Woman Doing Here? (A Reporter Reports on Herself). New York: Morrow, 1962. 285 pp. (See also biography by Ostroff, below.)

Noam Chomsky, "The US Media and the Tet Offensive", Race & Class, vol. XX, no. 1 (1978), pp. 21-39. A review essay on Braestrup's Big Story, very critical of Braestrup.

LT Kimberly Ann Cochran, "Press Coverage of the Persian Gulf War: Questions of Policy Beyond the Shadow of Vietnam." M.A. Thesis, National Security Affairs, Naval Postgraduate School, 1992. vii, 105 pp. Vietnam is pp. 48-60; Desert Shield/Desert Storm is pp. 70-92.

Columbia Journalism Review published two articles relating to the way the press covered the The 1968 Chicago Demonstrations:

Commentary. In the 1960s Commentary, edited by Norman Porhoretz and dominated by New York Jewish intellectuals, was a left-wing magazine, critical of the war. It later shifted to the right, and Podhoretz became one of the founders of "neoconservatism." It published relatively few articles about the Vietnam War during that war. A sample:

Commonweal. This Catholic magazine was suprisingly willing to criticize the war. But it did not consistently oppose the war. A sample of articles:

Mark Connelly and David Welch, eds., War and the Media: Reportage and Propaganda, 1900-2003. London and New York: I. B. Tauris, 2005. xxi, 304 pp. pb Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. 328 pp.

David Cort, The Sin of Henry R. Luce: An Anatomy of Journalism. Secaucus, NJ: L. Stuart, 1974. 481 pp.

Walter Cronkite, A Reporter's Life. New York: Knopf, 1996. viii, 384 pp. Cronkite was anchorman of the CBS Evening News from 1962 to 1981; he was sometimes said to be the most trusted man in America. Unfortunately the book has neither chapter titles nor index. The Vietnam War is on pp. 240-265; President Nixon's relations with the press are on pp. 221-224.

Walter Cronkite and Don Carleton, Conversations with Cronkite. Austin, TX: Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, Univesity of Texas, 2010. 300 pp. An oral history.

Walter Cronkite, "Report from Vietnam," CBS News, February 27, 1968. This is the famous special broadcast about the Tet Offensive, not presented as part of the CBS Evening News, that has often been cited as a crucial turning point in the war.

Thomas Crosbie, "Democratic Oversight and Military Autonomy: The U.S. Army's Management of American Journalism, 1939-2004." Ph.D. dissertation, Yale, 2014. 212 pp. UMI no. 3582239. The chapter on Vietnam is pp. 69-144.

David Culbert, "Johnson and the Media," in Robert A. Divine, ed., Exploring the Johnson Years (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981), pp. 214-248.

Douglas K. Daniel, Harry Reasoner: A Life in the News. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007. xiv, 270 pp. Reasoner worked at CBS, later at ABC during the Vietnam War. [See also Reasoner memoir below.]

Van M. Davidson, "A Journey to Geneva, A Vietnam Memoir." 2001. One of the alterations marked in by hand on this unpublished draft was to change the title, previously "Souvenirs de Guerre, 1970-1971." Davidson was the information officer for Delta Regional Assistance command, from July 1970. He regarded journalists as enemies, and remains very critical of them. The book consists mostly of his letters to his wife. The text has been placed online in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University, in parts: pp. 1-45, pp. 46-99, pp. 100-149, pp. 150-167.

James Deakin, Straight Stuff: The Reporters, the White House, and the Truth. New York: Morrow, 1984. 378 pp. (needs to be checked; I don't actually know this deals with Vietnam).

Herman H. Dinsmore, All the News that Fits: A Critical Analysis of the News and Editorial Content of the New York Times. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1969. 376 pp. An attack on the New York Times, by a man who had worked for the paper for many years. I have only taken a brief glance at the book; it looked pretty silly. A selection of the Conservative Book Club.

Hedley Donovan, Right Places, Right Times. Holt, 1989. 448 pp. Donovan was editor in chief of the Time, Inc., publications, from 1959 to 1979.

Robert J. Donovan and Ray Scherer, Unsilent Revolution: Television News and American Public Life. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992. (xi, 357 pp.?) Both authors had been Washington correspondents, Donovan for the Los Angeles Times and Scherer for NBC.

Corydon B. Dunham, Fighting for the First Amendment: Stanton of CBS vs. Congress and the Nixon White House. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1997. xiii, 233 pp. Foreword by Walter Cronkite. Mainly deals with the controversy over the 1971 documentary "The Selling of the Pentagon," but has some discussion of Vietnam.

Erik Durschmied, Shooting Wars: My Life as a War Cameraman, from Cuba to Iraq. New York: Pharos, 1991. 330 pp. Also published under the title Don't Shoot the Yanqui: The Life of a War Cameraman, London: Grafton, 1990. 330 pp. Memoirs of a BBC combat cameraman. Much of the book deals with Vietnam, where Durschmied spent a great deal of time starting in 1962.

Anthony O. Edmonds, "The Tet Offensive and Middletown: A Study in Contradiction", Nobody Gets Off the Bus: The Viet Nam Generation Big Book, Volume 5 Number 1-4, March 1994. A detailed look at reactions to the Tet Offensive in the local newspapers of Muncie, Indiana, plus the college newspaper of Ball State University.

Edith Efron, with Clytia Chambers, The News Twisters. Los Angeles: Nash, 1971. pb New York: Manor, 1972. A very important study if valid, but I am suspicious of it.

Lawrence Allen Eldridge, "Chronicles of a Two-Front War: The African-American Press and the Vietnam War." Ph.D. dissertation, History, University of Illinois at Chicago, 2002. 434 pp. AAT 3047849. The full text is available online if you are browsing the Internet from an institution, such as Clemson University, that has a subscription to ProQuest "Dissertations and Theses: Full Text."

Virginia Elwood-Akers, Women War Correspondents in the Vietnam War, 1961-1975. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow, 1988. ix, 274 pp.

Gloria A. Emerson, Winners & Losers: Battles, Retreats, Gains, Losses and Ruins from a Long War. New York: Random House, 1977. x, 406 pp. Reprinted with a new preface by Frances Fitzgerald: New York: Norton, 2014. xxvi, 580 pp. This is journalism about the war, not a memoir. Emerson had spent some time in vietnam in the 1950s, so she had some background when she was sent there by the New York Times in 1970.

Edwin Emery, "The Press in the Vietnam Quagmire," Journalism Quarterly, 48 (Winter 1971), 619-20.

Edward Jay Epstein, News from Nowhere: Television and the News. New York: Vintage, 1973.

Edward Jay Epstein, Between Fact and Fiction: The Problem of Journalism. New York: Vintage, 1975. xii, 232 pp. Includes (pp. 210-232) "The Televised War," originally published as "Vietnam: What Happened vs. What We Saw: We Lost Our Innocence," in TV Guide, September 29, October 6, and October 13, 1973.

Oriana Fallaci, Nothing, and So Be It: A Personal Search for Meaning in War. New York: Doubleday, 1972.

Francis Faulkner, "Bao Chi: The American News Media in Vietnam, 1960-1975". Ph.D. dissertation, Mass Communications, University of Massachusetts, 1981. 823 pp. AAT 8110327.

James Fenton, All the Wrong Places: Adrift in the Politics of Southeast Asia. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1988. London: Granta Books, 2005. xxiii, 269 pp. Fenton, a British leftist, was in Indochina, mostly South Vietnam and Cambodia, from 1973 to 1975. This period is covered, very impressionistically, in pp. 8-109.

Alex Ferguson, "Press Management and U.S. Support for France in Indochina, 1950-1954," Diplomatic History 42:2 (April 2018), pp. 228-53.

Jackie Walker Flowers, "'Life' in Vietnam: The Presentation of the Vietnam War in 'Life' Magazine, 1962-1972." Ph.D. dissertation, History, University of South Carolina, 1996. 309 pp. DA 9637115.

Max Frankel, The Times of My Life and My Life with the Times. New York: Random House, 1999. x, 546 pp. Frankel was, among other things, chief Washington correspondent of the New York Times 1968-1973.

Howard Friel and Richard Falk, The Record of the Paper: How the New York Times Misreports US Foreign Policy. London: Verso, 2004. x, 304 pp. The bulk of the book criticizes the New York Times for its support of the Iraq War, but there is one Vietnam chapter, with considerable discussion of Tonkin Gulf.

Fred W. Friendly, Due to Circumstances Beyond our Control. . .  New York: Random House, 1967.  xxvi, 325 pp. One chapter describes the disputes between Friendly and the top management of CBS over coverage of the Vietnam War, which led to Friendly's resignation as President of the News Division in February 1966.

David B. Frisk, If Not Us, Who? William Rusher, National Review, and the Conservative Movement. ISI Books, 2012. 517 pp. Rusher, as publisher of the National Review, was not just an important journalist, but an important figure in conservative politics.

Herbert Gans, Deciding what's news: a study of CBS evening news, NBC nightly news, Newsweek, and Time. New York: Pantheon, 1979. xvii, 393 pp. 2d ed. Northwestern University Press, 2005.

Gary Paul Gates, Air Time: The Inside Story of CBS News.  New York: Harper & Row, 1978.  pb New York: Berkley, 1979. 466 pp.

Todd Gitlin, The Whole World is Watching: Mass Media in the Making and Unmaking of the New Left. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980. xiii, 327 pp. Reprinted, with a new preface, 2003. xxv, 327 pp.

Lyn Gorman, "Television and War: Australia's Four Corners Programme and Vietnam, 1963–1975." War and Society 15:1 (May 1997). "Four Corners" was a current affairs program broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Commission. Gorman apparently (I have not seen the article) says that the program was not so supportive of the Vietnam War as most commentaries on the role of the Australian media during the war would have led one to expect.

Lyn Gorman, "Australian and American Media: From Korea to Vietnam." War and Society 18:1 (May 2000).

Kendall D. Gott, ed., The US Army and the Media in Wartime: Historical Perspectives. Fort Leavenworth, KS: Combat Studies Institute Press, 2010. vi, 296 pp. The Proceedings of the Combat Studies Institute 2009 Military History Symposium.

Phil G. Goulding, Confirm or Deny: Informing the People on National Security. New York: Harper & Row, 1970. Goulding was deputy to the Pentagon's chief press spokesman starting in about April of 1965, and became chief press spokesman--Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs--in February 1967.

Katharine Graham, Personal History. New York: Knopf, 1997. ix, 642 pp. Katharine Graham inherited her position as publisher of the Washington Post on the death of her husband, but became a great publisher, notable for her role in the Pentagon Papers and Watergate affairs. The book won a Pulitzer.

Ralph Graves, The LIFE I Led. Tiasquam Press, 2010. 216 pp. Graves worked for Time-Life publications from 1948 on; he was managing editor of Life from 1969 to 1972. I don't know how much this book says about coverage of Vietnam.

H. D. S. Greenway, Foreign Correspondent: A Memoir. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2014. xiii, 304 pp. Greenway arrived in Vietnam in 1967 as a correspondent for Time magazine. He was still there during the fall of South Vietnam in April 1975, working for the Washington Post. The Vietnam War chapters are pp. 27-98.

Henry A. Grunwald, One Man's America: A Journalist's Search for the Heart of His Country. Doubleday, 1996. 672 pp. Managing editor of Time, 1968-1979.

David Halberstam won a Pulitzer Prize for his 1963 coverage of Vietnam for the New York Times. Some of his writings on the war are listed in Temporary Peace and Renewed War, 1954-1964 and U.S. Policy. His writings specifically on the role of the media include:

Daniel C. Hallin, The "Uncensored War": The Media and Vietnam. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. viii, 285 pp. A splendid study of how the war was covered by The New York Times from 1961 to 1965, and by the major television networks from 1965 to 1972.

Daniel C. Hallin, "The Media, the War in Vietnam, and Political Support: A Critique of the Thesis of an Oppositional Media." Journal of Politics, 46:1 (February 1984), pp. 2-24. Text available to subscribers on JSTOR.

William M. Hammond, Reporting Vietnam: Media and Military at War. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1998. xi, 362 pp. An abridged version of the two volumes titled The Military and the Media listed under U.S. Army Publications

Max Hastings, Going to the Wars. Macmillan, 2000. pb London: Pan Books, 2001. xxii, 399 pp. Hastings, a British journalist (and now also a major military historian) first went to Vietnam briefly in 1970, for BBC Television and the London Evening Standard, covering the Cambodian Incursion among other things (pp. 69-94). He returned to cover Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam for a while in 1971 (pp. 97-115). He was in South Vietnam again 1974-75 (pp. 196-233). Very anti-Communist but not very pro-American. He has some interesting things to say about the nature of television journalism.

Michael Herr, "Hell Sucks", Esquire Magazine, August 1968.

Seymour Hersh first became famous as a journalist by breaking the story of My Lai in 1969; some of his writings on this are listed under The My Lai Massacre.

Martin F. Herz, with Leslie Rider, The Prestige Press and the Christmas Bombing, 1972: Images and Reality in Vietnam. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1985. xiii, 103 pp. Very critical of the press.

Robert E. Herzstein, Henry R. Luce: A Political Portrait of the Man Who Created the American Century. New York: Scribner's, 1994. xx, 521 pp.

Robert E. Herzstein, Henry R. Luce, Time, and the American Crusade in Asia. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005. xv, 346 pp.

Marguerite Higgins, Our Vietnam Nightmare. New York: Harper & Row, 1965. vi, 314 pp. By a hawkish war correspondent.

Yasutsune "Tony" Hirashiki, edited by Terry Irving, One the Frontlines of the Television War: A Legendary War Cameraman in Vietnam. Philadelphia and Oxford: Casemate, 2017. 365 pp. Japanese original published by Kodansha in 2008. Hirashiki went to Vietnam in 1966 as a freelance journalist and was quickly hired by ABC News.

Joyce Hoffmann, On Their Own: Women Journalists and the American Experience in Vietnam. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo (Perseus), 2008. 439 pp.

Haney Howell, Roadrunners: Combat Journalists in Cambodia. Boulder: Paladin Press, 1989. x, 282 pp.

John L. Jessup, ed., The Ideas of Henry Luce. New York, 1969.

Laurence R. Jurdem, Paving the War for Reagan: The Influence of Conservative Media on US Foreign Policy. Lexington: University Press of Kentudky, 2018. 280 pp.

Ward Just, To What End: Report from Vietnam. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1968. xii, 209 pp. The author was a correspondent for the Washington Post in Vietnam. The full text is available online to paid subscribers of Questia.

Kathleen Kearney Keeshen, "Marguerite Higgins: Journalist, 1920-1966." Ph.D. dissertation, Journalism, University of Maryland, 1983. 472 pp. AAT 8412020. Higgins, an experienced war correspondent, sided with the U.S. government, against reporters critical of the way the war was being run, in 1963.

Beverly Deepe Keever, Death Zones and Darling Spies: Seven Years of Vietnam War Reporting. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2013. xvii, 337 pp. Keever was in Vietnam approximately 1961-1969.

William V. Kennedy, The Military and the Media: Why the Press Cannot be Trusted to Cover a War. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1993. 184 pp.

James Keogh, President Nixon and the Press. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1972. 212 pp. Keogh had spent most of the 1960s as assistant managing editor (then briefly executive editor) of Time magazine, later briefly been President Nixon's chief speechwriter.

Montague Kern, Patricia W. Levering, and Ralph B. Levering, The Kennedy Crisis: The Press, the Presidency, and Foreign Policy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1983.

Donald Kirk, Tell it to the Dead: Memories of a War. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1975. xiv, 215 pp. Enlarged edition Tell it to the Dead: Stories of a War. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 1996. 306 pp. By a reporter for the Chicago Tribune.

Herbert G. Klein, Making It Perfectly Clear: An Inside Account of Nixon's Love-Hate Relationship with the Media. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1980. xiii, 464 pp. Klein was communications director in the Nixon White House.

Phillip Knightley, The First Casualty: From Crimea to Vietnam: The War Correspondent as Hero, Propagandist, and Myth Maker. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975. 465 pp. Third edition: The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth Maker From Crimea to Iraq. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004. xiii, 594 pp. Two chapters (pp. 409-469) deal with Vietnam. [Alternate third edition? The information I have found on this one is confusing]: The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero, Propagandist, and Myth Maker from the Crimea to Iraq. London: André Deutsch, 2003.

John Kobler, Luce: His Time, Life, and Fortune. New York, 1968.

Daniel Allan Koger, "The Liberal Opinion Press and the Kennedy Years on Vietnam: A Study of Four Journals (The New Leader, The Reporter, The New Republic, The Nation)." Ph.D. dissertation, Journalism, Michigan State, 1983. 171 pp. AAT 8400583. The New Leader and The Reporter were hawkish, The Nation was dovish, and The New Republic shifted toward dovishness during the course of the Kennedy administration.

Arthur Krock, Memoirs: Sixty Years on the Firing Line. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1968. xii, 508 pp. A columnist for the New York Times.

Arthur Krock, In the Nation: 1932-1966. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966. xvii, 455 pp.

Arthur Krock, The Consent of the Governed and Other Deceits. Boston: Little, Brown, 1971. 309 pp.

James Landers, Weekly War: Newsmagazines and Vietnam. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2004. 298 pp. A study of Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report. The full text of the Ph.D. dissertation from which this is derived (The University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2000, 332 pp., AAT 9996862) is available online if you are browsing the Internet from an institution, such as Clemson University, that has a subscription to ProQuest "Dissertations and Theses: Full Text."

John Laurence, The Cat from Hué: A Vietnam War Story. New York: Public Affairs, 2002. 850 pp. Laurence covered the Vietnam War for CBS 1965-66, 1967-68, and 1970. This looks like an important and valuable book. Transcript of Laurence's extended discussion of his book on the C-SPAN show "Booknotes," January 20, 2002.
Memo to authors and copy editors: Laurence uses a very good system I have not seen before, which should be used in some other books: Quotes based only on his memories are in single quotes 'like this'. Quotes for which he has contemporary records, not just old memories, giving him more confidence that he is reproducing the words exactly, are in double quotes "like this."

Jongsoo Lee, "Network Television Documentaries from 1964 to 1984 in a Changing Historical Context." Ph.D. Dissertation, Journalism, U. of Minnesota, 1994. 309 pp. DA9508950

Ernest W. Lefever, TV and National Defense: An Analysis of CBS News, 1972-1973. Boston, VA: Institute for American Strategy, 1974. I have not seen this book, but statements I have seen quoted from it looked biased and inaccurate.

Conrad M. Leighton, War Stories: A GI Reporter in Vietnam, 1970-1971. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2016. VI, 332 pp. As an enlisted soldier in the 1st Cavalry Division, Leighton was assigned to write stories for the division's internal publications. The book is made up mostly of letters he wrote to his parents, and stories he wrote for the division's publications.

Richard Glenn Lentz, "Resurrecting the Prophet: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the News Magazines." Ph.D. dissertation, Journalism, University of Iowa, 1983. 993 pp. AAT 8327402. Analyzes the way King's career and actions were covered by Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report.

Catherine Leroy, ed., Under Fire: Great Writers and Photographers in Vietnam. Foreword by Senator John McCain. New York: Random House, 2005. xvi, 172 pp.

Jacques Leslie, The Mark: A War Correspondent's Memoir of Vietnam and Cambodia. New York: Four Walls Eight Windows, 1995. 305 pp. Leslie arrived in Saigon at the beginning of 1972, an inexperienced and ignorant junior reporter for the Los Angeles Times, strongly anti-war. He learned fast, and was quite good by the time he was expelled from Saigon around mid 1973. He served in Cambodia in late 1973 and again in 1975. An introspective book, with a lot of detail about the personal lives of journalists.

The Library of Congress, Manuscript Division, has the papers of some of the most important American journalists who covered the Vietnam War, Joseph Alsop, Hedrick Smith, and Neil Sheehan.

Life Magazine was still an important publication in the 1960s. (See items listed under Bandtel and Flowers, above.) Published in a large format (13.5 by 10.5 inches) and famous for its publication of high-quality news photography, it had been founded (like Time) by the very anti-Communist and very influential publisher Henry Luce (see below). It published frequent articles on Vietnam. For example:

Major J. E. Longhofer, "An Analysis of the Psychological Necessity of Censorship in Combat Zones" Thesis, Master of Military Arts and Art and Science, U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, Ft. Leavenworth, KS, 1970. x, 197 pp. Critical of the behavior of the press in Vietnam. Looks particularly at the Tet Offensive and the Battle of Ap Bia Mountain ("Hamburger Hill").

Look was a large-format popular magazine, published bi-weekly. At least in the issues I have surveyed, the articles related to Vietnam tended to take a long view; Look tended not to publish articles dealing specifically with what had happened in the war during the two weeks since the previous issue had gone to press. A sample:

Jim G. Lucas, Dateline: Viet Nam (rev. ed.). New York: Award Books, 1968. Lucas arrived in Vietnam as a reporter for Scripps-Howard in January 1964.

Henry R. Luce, the politically conservative publisher of the magazines Life (see above) and Time, was the most powerful single man in American journalism in the 1940s and 1950s, and remained very influential until his death in 1967. See books by Baughman, Brinkley, Cort, Halberstam, Herzstein, Jessup, and Kobler (above) and Swanberg (below).

Hugh Lunn, Vietnam: A Reporter's War. New York: Stein and Day, 1985. By an Australian who arrived in Vietnam in 1967 as a reporter for Reuters.

J. Fred MacDonald, Television and the Red Menace: The Video Road to Vietnam. New York: Praeger, 1985.

Glenn MacDonald, Report or Distort?. New York: Exposition Press, 1973. xiii, 248 pp.

Capt. Terry McDonald, USCGR, "The Media and the Military: Time for Peaceful Co-existence?" Air Force Times, 15 August 1973. The text, incorporated into a lesson plan for use in March 1974 at the U.S. Army Institute for Military Assistance, has been placed online in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University.

Mike McGrady, A Dove in Vietnam. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1968. The author arrived in Vietnam in 1967 as a reporter for Newsday.

Thomas Michael McNulty, "Network Television Documentary Treatment of the Vietnam War, 1965 to 1969." Ph.D. dissertation, Journalism, Indiana University, 1974. 264 pp. 74-22780. Compares ABC with CBS.

Michael Maclear, Guerrilla Nation: My Wars In and Out of Vietnam. Toronto, Canada: Dundurn, 2013. 216 pp. Maclear, a reporter for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), was able to get into North Vietnam in 1969 and again in 1970. After leaving CBC he went for a third time in late 1970.

Michael Mandelbaum, "Vietnam: The Television War", Parameters, March 1983.

Murrey Marder was a reporter for the Washington Post from 1946 to 1985. He was one of that nrespaper's top reporters on foreign policy issues during the Vietnam War. His papers have been donated to the National Security Archive, where they are available to researchers, and a selection of them have been placed online:

Robert W. Merry, Taking on the World: Joseph and Stewart Alsop--Guardians of the American Century. New York: Viking, 1996. xxv, 644 pp. Joseph Alsop, whose column written for the Washington Post was also syndicated in almost two hundred other newspapers, was one of the most important and influential hawks in American journalism.

Dale Minor, The Information War. New York: Hawthorn, 1970. 212 pp. pb New York: Tower, 1970. 251 pp.

Charles Mohr, "Once Again--Did the Press Lose Vietnam?" Columbia Journalism Review, November/December 1983, pp. 51-56.

Edwin Moïse, The Myths of Tet: The Most Misunderstood Event of the Vietnam War. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2017. xi, 276 pp. Contains considerable analysis of the way the media covered the war in 1967 and 1968, strongly disagreeing with Peter Braestrup's book Big Story (see above) about media coverage of the Tet Offensive.

Edwin E. Moïse, "Tet in the News," Vietnam magazine, February 2019, pp. 30-37.

Roger Mudd, The Place to Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News. PublicAffairs, 2008. 432 pp.

Helen "Patches" Musgrove, Viet Nam: Front Row, Center. 2 vols. Santa Ana, CA: Patches Publishers, 1986. An ad for this book says Ms. Musgrove covered the war for over six years; hostile both to the Communists and to the "khaki mafia" within the US military.

Ron Nessen, Making the News, Taking the News: From NBC to the Ford White House. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2011. ix, 243 pp. Chapters 6-12 (pp. 31-65) deal with the time Nessen spent in Vietnam as a correspondent for NBC, intermittently from 1965 to 1973. Shortly after Gerald Ford became president in 1974, Nessen became his press secretary. (See also Nessen's other memoir listed under U.S. Policy: Nixon & Ford Administrations).

Major General Nguyen Bao Tri, ARVN, Minister of Information & Open Arms, Government of Vietnam; Barry Zorthian, Minister Counselor for Information, US Mission, Vietnam; and Col. Rodger R. Bankson, USA, Chief of Information, MACV; "Memorandum for Correspondents: Rules Governing Public Release of Military Information in Vietnam (Effective 1 November 1966)." 6 pp. The text has been placed online in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University.

Benjamin P. Norris, "Transnational Perception, an Ideal Typical Approach: An Examination of Ten Influential American Journals of Political Opinion Concerning their Image of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and its Allies, 1954-1973." Ph.D. dissertation, Political Science(?), University of Pittsburgh, 1976. 398 pp. DAH76-25941. From the abstract I get the impression this is overly theoretical.

Roberta Ostroff, Fire in the Wind: The Life of Dickey Chapelle. New York: Ballantine, 1992. xvii, 408 pp. Chapelle was a war correspondent from WWII until she was killed in Vietnam in November 1965. Her coverage of Vietnam in 1961 and 1962 was very hawkish.

Chester Pach, "From Vietnam to Iraq: The First Television War and Its Legacies," in Lawrence Sondhaus and A. James Fuller, eds., America, War and Power: Defining the State, 1775-2005 (Routledge, 2009).

Chester Pach, "'We Need to Get a Better Story to the American People': LBJ, the Progress Campaign, and the Vietnam War on Television," in Kenneth Osgood and Andrew K. Frank, eds., Selling War in a Media Age: The Presidency and Public Opinion in the American Century (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2010), pp. 170-195.

Frank Palmos, Ridding The Devils. Sydney and New York: Bantam, 1990. ix, 214. An incident on the outskirts of Saigon, May 1968, in which Viet Cong regulars killed four of a group of five journalists. Palmos was the one survivor.

Oscar Patterson, "The Vietnam Veteran and the Media: A Comparative Content Analysis of Media Coverage of the War and the Veteran, 1968-1973". Ph.D. dissertation, Mass Communications, University of Tennessee - Knoxville, 1982. 254 pp. AAT 8303712. The abstract refers to media coverage of the war but not of the veteran, and is confusing about the findings.

Oscar Patterson III, "An Analysis of Television Coverage of the Vietnam War," Journal of Broadcasting 28:4 (Fall 1984).

Oscar Patterson III, "Television's Living Room War in Print: Vietnam in the News Magazines," Journalism Quarterly, 61:1 (Spring 1984).

Jack T. Paxton, First to Go: The History of the USMC Combat Correspondents Association. Haworth, NJ: Saint Johann Press, 2018. 285 pp. I don't know how much of this deals with Vietnam.

Pham Xuan An was an important Communist intelligence agent who worked as a reporter first for Reuters, later for Time Magazine. See under Communist Intelligence and Security Organizations.

Douglas Porch, ""No Bad Stories": The American Media-Military Relationship," Naval War College Review, LV:1 (Winter 2002).

Press List of Correspondents Accredited to MACV. Issued monthly by the Information Advisory and Accreditation Division (IAAD), MACOI. The issue for February 1972 has been placed on-line in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University.

Proceedings of the U.S. Naval Institute is effectively, though not officially, the professional journal of the US Navy and Marine officer corps.

William Prochnau, Once Upon a Distant War. New York: Random House, 1995. xii, 546 pp. Press coverage of the early stages of the Vietnam War, 1961-63.

Robert A. Rabe, "Reporter in a Troubled World: Marquis W. Childs and the Rise and Fall of Postwar Liberalism." Ph.D. dissertation, Mass Communication, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2013. DA 3588936. iii, 337 pp.

Peter Rader, Mike Wallace: A Life. New York: Thomas Dunne Books (St. Martin's), 2012. viii, 323 pp.

Dan Rather, with Digby Diehl, Rather Outspoken: My Life in the News. New York: Grand Central Publishing (Hachette), 2012. 309 pp. The section on Vietnam--Rather was sent there as a CBS correspondent late in 1965--is relatively short.

Michèle Ray, The Two Shores of Hell (trans. by Elisabeth Abbott). New York: McKay, 1968. (Original: Des deux rives de l'enfer. Paris: Robert Laffont, 1967.) By a French journalist who went to Vietnam in 1966, observed various American units, and was then captured by Communist forces in January 1967 on Road 1 in Binh Dinh.

Harry Reasoner, Before the Colors Fade. New York: Knopf, 1981. 205 pp. A memoir. Reasoner worked at CBS, later at ABC during the Vietnam War. [See also biography by Daniel above.]

James Reston, Deadline: A Memoir. New York: Random House, 1991. xvii, 525. Reston was Washington Bureau Chief of the New York Times 1953-64, and Executive Editor 1968-69. Note: Reston's papers are held by the University of Illinois Archives.

Peter Richardson, A Bomb in Every Issue: How the Short, Unruly Life of Ramparts Magazine Changed America. The New Press, 2009. 247 pp. Ramparts started as a Catholic literary magazine, but became a leftist political magazine.

Thomas Rid, War and Media Operations: The US military and the press from Vietnam to Iraq. Abingdon and New York: Routledge (Taylor & Francis), 2007. The chapter on Vietnam is relatively short, pp. 53-63.

Chalmers M. Roberts, First Rough Draft: A Journalist's Journal of Our Times. New York: Praeger, 1973. ix, 356 pp. Roberts was a reporter for the Washington Post from 1949 to 1971. His discussion of Vietnam is based on the years he spent covering the policymakers in Washington. He passes off in a paragraph (p. 250) the few months he spent in Vietnam, in 1967.

Chalmers M. Roberts, The Washington Post: The First 100 Years. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977. xiii, 495 pp.

Carl Robinson, The Bite of the Lotus: An Intimate Memoir of the Vietnam War. Melbourne, Australia: Wilkinson Publishing, 2019. 321 pp. Robinson interrupted his undergraduate education to work for a year (mid 1964 to mid 1965) for USOM, under AID, as a deputy provincial representative in Go Cong province, in the Mekong Delta. He returned to the US and finished his degree, then went back to Vietnam in 1966 to the same job in Go Cong (though what had been USOM was then called USAID). In late 1967 he shifted to a job in CORDS headquarters for IV Corps in Can Tho. In February 1968, offended by very destructive government firepower in an area where as far as he could tell there had not actually been many Viet Cong, he resigned and promptly was hired by the Associated Press (AP). He was still with AP in Vietnam in April 1975.

Laura Roselle, Media and the Politics of Failure: Great Powers, Communication Strategies, and Military Defeats. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. 190 pp. Looks at the way the US and Soviet governments tried to spin military failure in Vietnam and Afghanistan respectively, through their media (especially TV). Says the similarities are surprising, for two such different systems.

Mitchel P. Roth, Historical Dictionary of War Journalism. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1997. xi, 482 pp.

Peter Sager (trans. from German by Ian Tickle), Report from Vietnam. Berne: Swiss Eastern Institute, 1968. 112 pp. Report, favorable to the US, by a journalist who visited South Vietnam and other countries of Southeast Asia, March to May, 1968.

Morley Safer, Flashbacks: On Returning to Vietnam. New York: Random House, 1990. xv, 206 pp. pb New York: St. Martin's, 1991. xix, 328 pp. Safer was a CBS reporter in Vietnam during the war. Most of this book is based on a return visit to Vietnam in 1989, but it includes important information about the war; see for example his discussion of the 1965 Cam Ne incident (chapter 12) and his interview with Pham Xuan An, a Communist agent who worked for Time magazine during the war (chapter 23).

Harrison Salisbury, a veteran journalist and an assistant managing editor of the New York Times, aroused a storm of controversy by his reporting from Hanoi in December 1966 and January 1967. He said that American bombing was hitting civilians more often, and was less effective in destroying its intended targets, than the US government was claiming.

Harrison E. Salisbury, ed., Vietnam Reconsidered: Lessons from a War. New York: Harper & Row, 1984. xvi, 335 pp. A large number of relatively short papers presented at a conference in 1983. About a quarter of the volume (pp. 81-176) is devoted to the role of the media in the war.

Sam Sarkesian, "Soldiers, Scholars, and the Media", Parameters, September 1977.

Sydney Schanberg, Beyond the Killing Fields: War Writings. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books, 2010. 242 pp.

Daniel Schorr, Clearing the Air. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977. xii, 333 pp. Schorr, a correspondent for CBS during the Vietnam War, dealt mostly with domestic politics, so this memoir does not have much to say about Vietnam, but I believe it says more than his more recent memoir Staying Tuned: A Life in Journalism (2001).

Philippa Schuyler, Good Men Die. New York: Twin Circle, 1969. 256 pp. The book was published posthumously; Schulyer, an African American journalist, was killed in a helicopter crash in vietnam in 1967.

Philip Seib, Information at War: Journalism, Disinformation, and Modern Warfare. Cambridge, UK, and Medford, MA: Polity, 2021. x, 226 pp. The section on the Vietnam War (pp. 29-41) treats the journalists' coverage of the Tet Offensive as having been more negative than it actually was.

Robert Shaplen was one of the journalists most knowledgeable about Saigon politics. He wrote long articles for the New Yorker, and published several widely read books, listed under Broad Accounts. His papers are at the Wisconsin State Historical Society.

Neil Sheehan, review of Mark Lane's book and a huge review essay, both focusing on the question of atrocities, The New York Times Book Review, December 27, 1970, and March 28, 1971, respectively.

Neil Sheehan, "The Role of the Press," Naval War College Review, LI:1 (Winter 1998) (reprinted from the February 1971 issue).

Neil Sheehan of UPI wrote a series of five articles, dated April 22 to 27, 1964, summing up many aspects of the war. Particularly interesting items included the third article, on Viet Cong terrorism, and the last, in which he tentatively endorses the domino theory, stating that if the US gives up on South Vietnam "it will have lost not only this country, but possibly also the rest of Southeast Asia." All five are available as a single file in the Virtual Vietnam Archive at Texas Tech University.

Neil Sheehan's papers are held by the Library of Congress.

Richard F. Shepard, The Paper's Papers: A Reporter's Journey through the Archives of The New York Times. New York: Times Books, 1996.

Micheal D. Sherer, "A TV Camera in Vietnam: Dave Hamer's Early Coverage of the War," Visual Communication Quarterly 4:3 (Summer 1997), pp 4-8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15551399709363356. Hamer was in Vietnam in May and June of 1962, representing not a major network but KMTV-TV, a local station in Omaha, Nebraska.

Stuart W. Showalter, "Coverage of Conscientious Objectors to the Vietnam War: An Analysis of the Editorial Content of American Magazines, 1964-1972." Ph.D. dissertation, Journalism, University of Texas at Austin, 1975. 173 pp. 76-8108.

BGeneral Winant Sidle, Press Briefing, Saigon, 27 February 1968. Mainly discussion of the rules about what can be revealed to the press about the results of enemy attacks on US bases. The text has been placed online in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University.

Uwe Siemon-Netto, Duc: A reporter's love for the wounded people of Vietnam. CreateSpace, 2013. 278 pp. A German journalist, Siemon-Netto covered Vietnam intermittently from 1965 to 1969, and in 1972.

Lewis M. Simons, To Tell the Truth: My Life as a Foreign Correspondent. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2022. xviii, 278 pp. The Associated Press (AP) sent Simons to Vietnam in July 1967; he was there thirteen months (pp. 54-94). AP picked him for the job, despite his lack of experience as a foreign correspondent, because he seemed likely to support US government policy. In late March 1975, the Washington Post sent him to Cambodia; he remained only briefly until the US government evacuated all Americans in mid-April. He then spent some in Laos, observing the gradual Pathet Lao takeover of Vientiane. He describes what he saw in Cambodia and Laos in 1975, and some reflections on the longer trajectory of the wars there, on pp. 159-175.

Ryan Singsank, "Skepticism and Exposure: Television Coverage of the Vietnam War," Armstrong Undergraduate Journal of History 10:2 (2020), pp. 78-99.

Melvin Small, Covering Dissent: The Media and the Anti-Vietnam War Movement. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, September 1994. x, 228 pp. The full text is available online to paid subscribers of Questia.

Howard K. Smith, Events Leading Up to My Death: The Life of a Twentieth-Century Reporter. New York: St. Martin's, 1996. x, 419 pp. Smith, liberal on domestic issues but a hawk on Vietnam, was co-anchor of the ABC Evening News 1969-1975.

Terence Smith, Four Wars, Five Presidents: A Reporter's Journey from Jerusalem to Saigon to the White House. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2021. x, 219 pp. As a reporter for the New York Times Smith was based in Bangkok from late 1967 to late 1968, covering Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and the rest of Southeast Asia other than Vietnam, then (pp. 67-92) was Saigon bureau chief from December 1968 to June 1970.

Carl Sorensen, As I Saw It: How a TV Cameraman Covered News in Bygone Days. San Jose, New York, and Lincoln, NE: Authors Choice (iUniverse.com), 2001. ix, 230 pp. Sorensen, a Dane, began working for CBS in 1964. Pages 37-78 are devoted mostly to his work as a CBS cameraman in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia; he was in those countries intermittently between January 1966 and 1970.

John F. Stacks, Scotty: James B. Reston and the Rise and Fall of American Journalism. 2003. Reston, of the New York Times, was very influential throughout the period of the Vietnam War (see also memoir, above).

John Steinbeck, edited by Thomas E. Barden, Steinbeck in Vietnam: Dispatches from the War. University of Virginia Press, 2012. 224 pp. From December 1966 to May 1967, the best-selling novelist John Steinbeck was in Southeast Asia as a correspondent for Newsday.

Ron Steinman, Inside Television's First War: A Saigon Journal. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press, 2002. 262 pp. Steinman was NBC bureau chief in Saigon from April 1966 to July 1968.

C. L. Sulzberger, A Long Row of Candles: Memoirs and Diaries, 1934-1954. New York: Macmillan, 1973. xvi, 1061 pp. Cyrus L. Sulzberger was chief foreign correspondent of the New York Times from 1944 to 1954; he would be a very influential foreign affairs columnist for decades afterward. Includes a significant amount on Indochina.

C. L. Sulzberger, The Last of the Giants. New York: Macmillan, 1970. xv, 1063 pp.

C. L. Sulzberger, An Age of Mediocrity: Memoirs and Diaries, 1963-1972. New York: Macmillan, 1973. xii, 828 pp.

Colonel Harry G. Summers, "Western Media and Recent Wars." Military Review, 66:5 (May 1986), pp. 4-17.

Jon Swain, River of Time. New York: St. Martins, 1997. pb New York: Berkley, 1999. xiv, 281 pp. Swain, a British journalist, was a correspondent for Agence France-Presse (AFP) first in Cambodia, then in South Vietnam 1970-72, and a free-lancer, mostly in Vietnam, 1973-75. He was in Phnom Penh during the Khmer Rouge takeover in 1975. His account focusses mainly on his life as a journalist (with a lot about opium and women), much of it after the war ended. But it contains useful information about the war.

W.A. Swanberg, Luce and His Empire. New York: Scribner, 1972. xiii, 529 pp. This biography of Henry Luce, the politically conservative and very influential publisher of Time and Life, won a Pulitzer Prize.

Gary C. Tallman and Joseph P. McKerns, "Press Mess: David Halberstam, the Buddhist Crisis, and U.S. Policy in Vietnam, 1963." Journalism & Communication Monographs 2:3 (Fall 2000), pp. 109-153 (of which pp. 144-153 are endnotes).

Wallace Terry, "Time's Frank McCulloch: In the Eye of the Hurricane", in The VVA Veteran, December 2002. This is Terry's interview with McCulloch, who was Saigon bureau chief for the Time-Life News Service from early 1964 (when it was a one-man operation; he replaced Charlie Mohr) to 1967 (when it was a large team).

Wallace Terry, Missing Pages: Black Journalists of Modern America: An Oral History. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2007. 375 pp. Includes a number of journalists' accounts of the Indochina War: Terry himself (of Time magazine), Ed Bradley of CBS, Carl Rowan, Ethel Payne of the Chicago Defender, Tom Johnson of the New York Times.

Tiziano Terzani, Pelle di leopardo: diario vietnamita di un corrispondente di guerra 1972–1973. Milano, Italy: Feltrinelli, 1973. 231 pp. By an Italian journalist.

A. Trevor Thrall, "War in the Media Age: The Government/Press Struggle from Vietnam to the Gulf." Ph.D. dissertation, Political Science, M.I.T., 1996. 361 pp. The full text is available online.

Seymour Topping, On the Front Lines of the Cold War: An American Correspondent's Journal from the Chinese Civil War to the Cuban Missile Crisis and Vietnam. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2010. xv, 435 pp. After covering the civil war of the late 1940s in China, Topping went to Saigon as an AP reporter in February 1950. He covered Vietnam and Cambodia off and on for years thereafter; he was involved in the New York Times's publication of the Pentagon Papers in 1971.

Nu-Anh Tran, "South Vietnamese Identity, American Intervention, and the Newspaper Chinh Luan [Political Discussion], 1965–1969." Journal of Vietnamese Studies, Vol. I, nos. 1–2 (February/August 2006), pp. 169-209.

Liz Trotta, Fighting for Air: In the Trenches with Television News. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991. Ms. Trotta, of NBC, became in 1968 the first female network TV correspondent assigned to Vietnam. She was and is pro-war, and criticizes journalists who took an anti-war attitude.

William Tuohy, Dangerous Company. New York: William Morrow, 1987. 395 pp. Somewhat over 100 pages of this are devoted to Vietnam, where Tuohy was a reporter starting at the beginning of 1965, first for Newsweek and later for the Los Angeles Times.

Kathleen J. Turner, Lyndon Johnson's Dual War: Vietnam and the Press. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985. ix, 358 pp.

Garrick Utley, You Should Have Been Here Yesterday: A Life in Television News. New York: Public Affairs, 2000. xvi, 285 pp. A moderate portion of this book deals with Utley's coverage of the Vietnam War as a correspondent for NBC. He arrived in Vietnam in July 1964, and stayed to about the end of 1965; this is covered on pp. 29-74. There is other Vietnam-related material from his 1968 and 1975 experiences in Vietnam, and work elsewhere related to the war, on pp. 83-85, 102-112, and 157-169.

"Valley of Death," documentary broadcast on CNN, June 7, 1998. Operation Tailwind began September 11, 1970, when a SOG Hatchet team of 16 Americans and 110 Montagnards was landed by helicopter in southern Laos near the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The CNN documentary and an article published simultaneously in Time magazine said that Sarin nerve gas had been used in the operation, and that killing Americans who had defected to the Communist forces had been among its goals. CNN later retracted these allegations.

Rosemary Johanna van Es, "Canadian 'Chivalry' in Vietnam: The Press Coverage." Ph.D. dissertation, Sociology, McMaster University, 1996. 375 pp. DANN13690.

The Vanderbilt Television News Archive is a huge collection, holding recordings of the evening news broadcasts of the major networks from August 1968 onward, and of other news and news-type broadcasts for some more recent years.

Lawrence Voix, "La guerre du Vietnam à travers la télévision française," in Christoper Goscha and Maurice Vaïsse, eds., La guerre du Vietnam et l'Europe, 1963-1973 (Bruxelles: Bruylant/Paris: L.G.D.J., 2003), pp. 271-286.

Kurt Volkert and T. Jeff Williams, foreword by Bernard Kalb, A Cambodian Odyssey and the Deaths of 25 Journalists. Lightning Source, 2001. 304 pp. Deals with how 25 journalists were killed covering the war in Cambodia in 1970, and Volkert's efforts, long afterward, to recover some of the bodies.

Betsy Wade, ed., Forward Positions: The War Correspondence of Homer Bigart. Fayetteville: Arkansas University Press, 1992. xxv, 240 pp. Not a lot of Vietnam material: 24 pages written in Vietnam in the first half of 1962, plus one 1971 article on the trial of Lt. Calley.

Mike Wallace and Gary Paul Gates, Close Encounters. New York: William Morrow, 1984. 494 pp.

Mike Wallace, with Gary Paul Gates, Between You and Me: A Memoir. New York: Hyperion, 2005. 292 pp.

Denis Warner, Reporting Southeast Asia. Sydney, Australia: Angus and Robertson, 1966. 342 pp. Warner's views tended to the right.

Matthew A. Wasniewski, "Walter Lippmann, Strategic Internationalism, the Cold War, and Vietnam, 1943-1967." Ph.D. dissertation, History, University of Maryland, College Park, 2004. AAT 3139091. 664 pp. Lippmann was a very influential political columnist.

Kate Webb, On the Other Side: 23 Days with the Viet Cong. New York: Quadrangle, 1972. xvi, 160 pp. Account by a UPI reporter who was captured by the Viet Cong in Cambodia, 1971.

General William Westmoreland, "A Commander's View of the War in Vietnam." Speech to the Associated Press Mananging Editors Luncheon, Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York, 24 April 1967, followed by question-and-answer session. 11 pp. speech, 10 pp. questions and answers. The text has been placed online in the Virtual Vietnam Archive of the Vietnam Project, at Texas Tech University.

William S. White, The Making of a Journalist. University Press of Kentucky, 1988. 248 pp. As a syndicated columnist, White was remarkably hostile to Hanoi in the late 1960s. But he had had a long career; there might not be much about Vietnam in a memoir of this length.

Marion Williams, My Tour in Vietnam: A Burlesque Shocker. New York: Vantage, 1970. By a black female journalist.

James Willwerth, Eye in the Last Storm: A Reporter's Journal of One Year in Southeast Asia. New York: Grossman, 1972. xii, 178 pp. The author was a reporter for Time in Southeast Asia, 1970-71. The book is short and episodic, and deals more with what it was like to be a reporter in Vietnam and Cambodia than with the war itself.

Clarence R. Wyatt, Paper Soldiers: The American Press and the Vietnam War. New York: Norton, 1993. 272 pp.

Oral histories for many important figures of the 1960s have been collected by the LBJ Presidential Library. Some of these have been placed online at an Oral History Collection Web page at the LBJ Presidential Library. Far more of them have been placed online in the Lyndon B. Johnson Oral History collection at the Miller Center for Public Affairs, University of Virginia. If you are hoping to find online an oral history not specifically mentioned in the listing below, check the Lyndon B. Johnson Oral History collection first; its holdings are by far the most complete. Among the journalists and public affairs officers whose oral histories are included in these collections are:

For the role of the media up to 1964: See the books by Browne, Halberstam, Mecklin, and Tregaskis, in the section Temporary Peace and Renewed War, 1954-1964.

Go to Congressional Committee documentation on the Media

 

Photojournalism and Photo Books

Alyssa Adams, ed., Eddie Adams: Vietnam. New York: Umbrage Editions, 2008. 223 pp. Eddie Adams, a photojournalist who worked for the Associated Press, covered the Vietnam War from 1965 to 1968, and also covered the "boat people" fleeing Vietnam in 1977. This volume contains many of Adam's photographs, accompanied by a narrative written by Adams' boss in the Associated Press, Hal Buell.

Owen Andrews, C. Douglas Elliot, and Laurence I. Levin, Vietnam: Images from Combat Photographers. Washington, DC: Starwood Publishing, 1991. 106 pp. Said to be a good collection of photos from the National Archives.

Tim Bowden, One Crowded Hour: Neil Davis, Combat Cameraman. Sydney, Australia: Collins, 1987. xi, 436 pp. Davis first went to Indochina in 1964, an Australian (Tasmanian) photojournalist working for Visnews. Spent much of the period 1964-1975 there, focusing a lot on ARVN rather than US operations in Vietnam, a lot on Cambodia in the 1970s. The book includes long quotes from Davis: a lot of letters he wrote to his aunt, a few diary entries, a lot of things he told Bowden while Bowden was working on the book in the 1980s. Unfortunately Davis died in 1985.

Captain Robert L. "Bob" Bowen, USMC, Retired, edited by Robin Kern, My Live and Lens: The Story of a Marine Corps Combat Correspondent. Bloomington, IN: iUniverse, 2017. xxi, 388 pp. Bowen began his first tour in Vietnam, as a correspondent for Leatherneck magazine, assigned to III MAF, in January 1966.

Dean Brelis, photographs by Jill Krementz, The Face of South Vietnam. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1968. 250 pp. The text, pp. 1-112, is by Brelis, who was in Vietnam as a correspondent for NBC from August 1965 to August 1966. The photos, pp. 113-244, are by Krementz. Photo captions, with dates, are pp. 245-50.

Hal Buell, Viet Nam: Land of Many Dragons. Dodd, Mead, 1968. 142 pp. Mostly photographs; text summarizes the history of Vietnam and of the war. Buell headed the photographic section of the Associated Press.

Larry Burrows, Vietnam. Introduction by David Halberstam. New York: Knopf, 2002. 243 pp. A collection of photos. Burrows, one of the best press photographers of the Vietnam War, was killed covering the Laotian Incursion of 1971.

Jean-Pierre Dannaud, Guerre morte. Saigon: Société Asiatic d'Éditions, 1954. Reprinted Paris: Pensée Moderne, 1973. A photo book, not paginated, on the First Indochina War.

Leo J. Daugherty and Gregory Louis Mattson, Nam: A Photographic History. New York: Metro Books, 2001. 608 pp. New York: Barnes & Noble, 2004. 608 pp. A huge tome, with a lot of text, not just pictures.

David Douglas Duncan, I Protest! [subtitle on cover but not on title page Khe Sanh, Vietnam]. New York: Signet/New American Library, 1968. The bulk of the book is a collection of photographs, without captions, that photojournalist Duncan took during an eight-day stay at Khe Sanh in February 1968. There is also an introduction, bitterly critical of US policy.

Horst Faas and Tim Page, eds., introduction by David Halberstam, contributions by Peter Arnett, Tad Bartimus, Nguyen Khuyen, John Lawrence, Richard Pyle, Pierre Schoendoerffer, Neil Sheehan, Jon Swain, and William Tuohy, Requiem: By the Photographers Who Died in Vietnam and Indochina. New York: Random House, 1997. 336 pp.  A very impressive collection of photographs of the First and Second Indochina Wars, by photographers of the United States, France, Vietnam (both sides), and other nationalities who were killed covering the war.  Includes the names, and biographical sketches if the information is available (for many of the Vietnamese it is not) of all the photographers known to have been killed covering the war.

Horst Faas and Helene Gedouin, Henri Huet: "J'etais photographe de guerre au Vietnam. Paris: Editions du Chene (Hachette), 2006. 191 pp. Huet was one of the best photojournalists of the Indochina Wars. Born in Dalat, of mixed French-Vietnamese parentage, he grew up in France. He returned to Vietnam during the First Indochina War, initially as a French Army photographer. He later worked for UPI, then for AP. He was killed in a helicopter crash on the Ho Chi Minh Trail in 1971.

Donald M. Goldstein, Katherine V. Dillon, and J. Michael Wenger, The Vietnam War: The Story and Photographs. Washington, DC: Brassey's, 1999. 192 pp.

Sean Flynn, son of the famous actor, covered the Vietnam War as a freelance photographer. I believe he was working for Time when he and another freelance photographer, Dana Stone (working for CBS) were captured by Vietnamese communist forces while travelling on Highway 1 in Svay Rieng province, eastern Cambodia, early April 1970. They were later executed by the Khmer Rouge.

David R. Frazier, Drafted: Vietnam at War and at Peace. Carlton, Oregon: Ridenbaugh Press, 2014. Frazier was a public relations specialist--a photojournalist--for MACV, probably 1967-68.

Philip Jones Griffiths, Vietnam Inc. New York: Collier, 1971. Reprinted, with a new introduction by Noam Chomsky, London: Phaidon Press, 2001. 224 pp. A collection of photos. Griffiths, who covered Vietnam with the Magnum photo agency 1966-71, was strongly hostile to the war.

Mark Jury, The Vietnam Photo Book. New York: Grossman, 1971. 160 pp. New York: Vintage, 1986. 160 pp. Jury was a roving photojournalist for USARV, July 1969 to July 1970.

Mark Jury, "'It Made Me Who I Am': John Olson's Enduring Images of Tet." VVA Veteran, 30:2 (March-April 2010), pp. 32-33. John Olson, drafted, got himself assigned as a photographer for Stars & Stripes; he covered the fighting both in Saigon and in Hue during the Tet Offensive.

David Kennerly, Shooter. New York: Newsweek Books, 1979. 269 pp. Kennerly became Saigon bureau chief for UPI in 1971, and won a Pulitzer Prize for his photography of the Vietnam War.

Life Magazine published a lot of good photojournalism during the war; see above.

James Allen Logue and Gary D. Ford, Rain in Our Hearts: Alpha Company in the Vietnam War. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 2020. xix, 176 pp. The volume contains more than 100 photos taken by Logue while he was serving in A Company, 4/31 Infantry, 196th Brigade, 23d Infantry Division (Americal), 1969-1970. Text by Gary D. Ford.

Don McCullin, Don McCullin. Introduction by Harold Evans, essay by Susan Sontag. London: Jonathan Cape, 2003. 296 pp. An Englishman, McCullin was one of the major war photographers. Photos taken in Vietnam (1965, 1968) and Cambodia (1970, 1975) make up a bit more than a tenth of the book.

Michael Maclear (text) and Hal Buell (photo editor), Vietnam: A Chronicle of the War [on title page] or Vietnam: A Complete Photographic History [on cover]. New York: Tess Press (Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers), 2003. 736 pp. This large and very impressive volume combines the text of Michael Maclear's book The Ten Thousand Day War with more than 2,000 photographs and maps, most of which came from the files of the Associated Press.

Susan D. Moeller, Shooting War: Photography and the American Experience of Combat. New York: Basic Books, 1989. The full text is available online to paid subscribers of Questia.

Lisa Nguyen, ed., We Shot the War: Overseas Weekly in Vietnam. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 2018. xi, 210 pp.

Tim Page, Page after Page: Memoirs of a War-Torn Photographer. New York: Macmillan, 1988. 238 pp. Page, an Englishman, arrived in Vietnam early in 1965, but had had some previous experience in other parts of Southeast Asia.

Tim Page, The Mindful Momement. Thames & Hudson, 2001. 240 pp. Page has selected the best of his photos from Indochina, taken both during and since the war.

Tim Page, "Vietnam through the Lens of Larry Burrows," MHQ: Quarterly Journal of Military History, 22 (Spring 2010), pp. 72-83.

Richard Pyle and Horst Faas, Lost Over Laos: A True Story of Tragedy, Mystery, and Friendship. Foreword by David Halberstam. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Da Capo, 2003. xxiv, 276 pp. Photographers Larry Burrows, Henri Huet, Kent Potter, and Keisaburo (Keizaburo) Shimamoto were killed in the crash of a helicopter in Laos on February 10, 1971, during Lam Son 719.

Julian Stallabrass, Killing for Show: Photography, War, and the Media in Vietnam and Iraq. Lanham, MD and London: Rowmand & Littlefield, 2020. xxv, 325 pp.

Brigitte Tison, Sud-Vietnam 1973: Un pays, des enfants et la guerre. Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire: Éditions Alan Sutton, 2005. 127 pp. A photo book with captions. Dr. Tison was director of "le centre Terre des Hommes-France de Saigon," a charitable institution caring for children, in 1973. The photos are good, and quite diverse; street scenes, children, and Montagnards, but also temples, imperial tombs, etc. But the comment on the back cover about the sound of B-52s taking off every day from the Saigon airport does not fill me with confidence.

"An Unlikely Weapon - The Eddie Adams Story." Documentary film, 2009. About the Pulitzer Prize winning photographer (see above under Alyssa Adams).

Walter Patrick Wade, "'A Degree of Disillusion': News Media, Photojournalism, and Visual Narratives of the Vietnam War." Ph.D. dissertation, Communications Studies, Northwestern, 2013.

 

The Pentagon Papers Case

Floyd Abrams, Speaking Freely: Trials of the First Amendment. New York: Viking, 2005. 336 pp. Abrams was one of the attorneys who represented the New York Times in the Pentagon Papers case, which is covered in the first two chapters (pp. 1-61) of this book.

Thomas S. Blanton, ed., The Pentagon Papers: Secrets, Lies and Audiotapes (The Nixon Tapes and the Supreme Court Tape). National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book Number 48. This compilation of material, published online, includes transcripts and actual tapes (streaming audio) of President Nixon's telephone conversations about the release of the Pentagon Papers when they first began to be published; the secret briefs (redacted) that the government filed with the courts arguing that release of the Pentagon Papers would cause dire harm to national security; and other related materials. Index.

Ben Bradlee [Benjamin C. Bradlee], A Good Life: Newspapering and Other Adventures. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995. 514 pp. Bradlee was executive editor of the Washington Post. There is one chapter on the Pentagon Papers, only a little discussion of other aspects of the Vietnam War.

Ben Bradlee, Jr., "The Deceit and Conflict Behind the Leak of the Pentagon Papers," published online by The New Yorker, April 8, 2021. [I am not sure whether this will be published in the print edition. Bradlees is reported to be writing a biography of Daniel Ellsberg.]

Geoffrey A. Campbell, The Pentagon Papers: National Security versus the Public's Right to Know. San Diego, CA: Lucent Books, 2000. 112 pp. Intended for young readers.

James D. Carroll, "Confidentiality of Social Science Research Sources and Data: The Popkin Case." PS 6:3 (Summer 1973), pp. 268-280. Sam Popkin was briefly jailed in November 1972 for contempt of court, when he refused, citing the First Amendment, to answer questions before a grand jury investigating the publication of the Pentagon Papers. If you browse the Internet through an institution that has subscribed to JSTOR, you can access the text online.

Daniel Ellsberg, Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers. New York: Viking, 2002. x, 498 pp. I strongly recommend this memoir, by the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers to the media.

Daniel Ellsberg et. al., "The Pentagon Papers: A VVA Symposium", in The VVA Veteran, 22:6/7 (June/July 2002) pp. 24-30, 42. Interesting and thoughtful comments on the issue of leaking. Most of this is Ellsberg's keynote speech at a symposium held at the National Press Club, in Washington, D.C., in June 2001, and Ellsberg's responses to questions from the audience. There are brief introductory remarks by Jim Doyle, George Duggins, and Marc Leepson.

Leslie H. Gelb, "The Pentagon Papers and the Vantage Point." Foreign Policy no. 6 (Spring 1972), pp. 25-41. Gelb, who headed the group that wrote the Pentagon Papers, discusses the writing process, and discusses Lyndon Johnson's memoir The Vantage Point in relation to the Pentagon Papers. If you browse the Internet through an institution that has subscribed to JSTOR, you can access the text online.

Leslie Gelb, oral history. Gelb headed the group that wrote the Pentagon Papers. From the oral history collection of the LBJ Presidential Library, placed online in the Lyndon B. Johnson Oral History collection at the Miller Center for Public Affairs, University of Virginia.

Facts on File, Editorials on File, vol. 2, no. 12, June 16-30, 1971, pp. 695-797, The Pentagon Papers.

General John R. Galvin, Fighting the Cold War: A Soldier's Memoir. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2015. In September 1967, while serving in the Pentagon, Galvin was brought into the late stages of the process of researching and writing the Pentagon Papers (pp. 161-63).

Susan Dudley Gold, The Pentagon Papers: National Security or the Right to Know. New York: Benchmark Books, 2004. 144 pp. Intended for young readers.

James C. Goodale, Fighting for the Press: The Inside Story of the Pentagon Papers and Other Battles. New York: CUNY Journalism Press, 2013. 260 pp. Goodale was general counsel for the New York Times.

D.J. Herda, New York Times v. United States: National Security and Censorship. Hillside, NJ: Enslow, 1994. 104 pp. Intended for young readers.

"The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers." A documentary film directed by Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith. 2010.

"The Pentagon Papers at 50: A Special Report." Oral histories and articles on various issues surrounding the publication of the Pentagon Papers, published online by the New York Times on the fiftieth anniversary of the original publication.

John Prados and Margaret Pratt Porter, eds., Inside the Pentagon Papers. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004. xii, 248 pp. This has been very favorably reviewed.

Chalmers M. Roberts, First Rough Draft: A Journalist's Journal of Our Times. New York: Praeger, 1973. ix, 356 pp. Roberts was a reporter for the Washington Post from 1949 to 1971. He played a crucial role in the Washington Post's publication of material from the Pentagon Papers in 1971 (pp. 319-24).

David Rudenstine, The Day the Presses Stopped: A History of the Pentagon Papers Case. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996. x, 416 pp.

Kenneth W. Salter, The Pentagon Papers Trial. Berkeley, CA: Editorial Justa Publications, 1975. xii, 123 pp.

Peter Schrag, Test of Loyalty: Daniel Ellsberg and the Rituals of Secret Government. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1974. 414 pp.

Janny Scott, "Now It Can Be Told: How Neil Sheehan Got the Pentagon Papers," New York Times, January 7, 2021.

Martin M. Shapiro, ed., The Pentagon Papers and the Courts: A Study in Foreign Policy-making and Freedom of the Press. San Francisco: Chandler, 1972. ix, 131 pp.

Seymour Topping, On the Front Lines of the Cold War: An American Correspondent's Journal from the Chinese Civil War to the Cuban Missile Crisis and Vietnam. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2010. xv, 435 pp. Topping was involved in the New York Times's publication of the Pentagon Papers in 1971 (chapters 33, 36).

Robert F. Turner, Myths of the Vietnam War: The Pentagon Papers Reconsidered. New York: American Friends of Vietnam, 1972. iv, 55 pp.

Sanford J. Ungar, The Papers & The Papers: An Account of the Legal and Political Battle over the Pentagon Papers. New York: Dutton, 1972. 319 pp.

Sanford J. Ungar, "The Pentagon Papers Trial" (available online to subscribers), The Atlantic Monthly, November 1972, pp. pp. 22-34.

Tom Wells, Wild Man: The Life and Times of Daniel Ellsberg. New York: Palgrave (St. Martin's), 2001. xi, 692 pp.

For various partial and complete versions of the actual text of the Pentagon Papers, go to The Pentagon Papers

Return to Table of Contents

 Next section: Propaganda and Psychological Warfare

Copyright © 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, Edwin E. Moise. This document may be reproduced only by permission. Revised March 27, 2024.