Michael Herr
![Michael Herr](/assets/img/authors/michael-herr.jpg)
Michael Herr
Michael David Herrwas an American writer and war correspondent, known as the author of Dispatches, a memoir of his time as a correspondent for Esquire magazineduring the Vietnam War. The book was called the best "to have been written about the Vietnam War" by The New York Times Book Review; novelist John le Carré called it "the best book I have ever read on men and war in our time." Herr later was credited with pioneering the literary genre of...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionMemoirist
Date of Birth13 April 1940
CountryUnited States of America
We never announced a scorched-earth policy; we never announced any policy at all, apart from finding and destroying the enemy, and we proceeded in the most obvious way. We used what was at hand, dropping the greatest volume of explosives in the history of warfare over all the terrain within the thirty-mile sector which fanned out from Khe Sanh. Employing saturation-bombing techniques, we delivered more than 110,000 tons of bombs to those hills during the eleven-week containment of Khe Sanh.
It's a corny old gag about Las Vegas, the temporal city if there ever was one, trying to camouflage the hours and retard the dawn, when everybody knows that if you're feeling lucky you're really feeling time in its rawest form, and if you're not feeling lucky, they've got a clock at the bus station.
Maybe nothing's so unfunny as an omen read wrong.