Books

  1. Doc: Platoon Medic
    Doc: Platoon Medic

  2. Napoleon
    Napoleon

  3. The Diaries of John Gregory Bourke: November 20, 1872, to July 28, 1876 (Diaries of John Gregory Bourke)
    The Diaries of John Gregory Bourke: November 20, 1872, to July 28, 1876 (Diaries of John Gregory Bourke)

  4. At Hitler's Side: The Memoirs of Hitler's Luftwaffe Adjutant 1937-1945
    At Hitler's Side: The Memoirs of Hitler's Luftwaffe Adjutant 1937-1945

  5. Slade Cutter: Submarine Warrior
    Slade Cutter: Submarine Warrior

  6. Opa's Tales: An Odyssey from War Torn East Prussia to the American Midwest
    Opa's Tales: An Odyssey from War Torn East Prussia to the American Midwest

  7. Passing Time: Memoir of a Vietnam Veteran Against the War
    Passing Time: Memoir of a Vietnam Veteran Against the War

  8. Diary of a Confederate Soldier: John S. Jackman of the Orphan Brigade
    Diary of a Confederate Soldier: John S. Jackman of the Orphan Brigade

  9. Southern Hero: Matthew Calbraith Butler, Confederate General, Hampton Redshirt, and U.S. Senator
    Southern Hero: Matthew Calbraith Butler, Confederate General, Hampton Redshirt, and U.S. Senator

  10. Harlem at War: The Black Experience in Wwii
    Harlem at War: The Black Experience in Wwii

  11. In My Sights : The Memoir of a P-40 Ace
    In My Sights : The Memoir of a P-40 Ace

  12. Flying Blind: A Memoir of Biplane Flying over Waziristan in the Last Days of British Rule in India
    Flying Blind: A Memoir of Biplane Flying over Waziristan in the Last Days of British Rule in India

  13. An Eighth Air Force Combat Diary: Combat Missions Flown with the 100th Bomb Group, England 1944-1945
    An Eighth Air Force Combat Diary: Combat Missions Flown with the 100th Bomb Group, England 1944-1945

  14. Vietnam-Perkasie: A Combat Marine Memoir
    Vietnam-Perkasie: A Combat Marine Memoir

  15. The Winking Fox
    The Winking Fox

  16. Lawrence: The Uncrowned King of Arabia
    Lawrence: The Uncrowned King of Arabia

  17. In Camp and Battle With the Washington Artillery of New Orleans
    In Camp and Battle With the Washington Artillery of New Orleans

  18. One Tough Marine
    One Tough Marine

  19. Robert E. Lee: A Life Portrait
    Robert E. Lee: A Life Portrait

  20. The Biographical Roster of the Immortal 600
    The Biographical Roster of the Immortal 600

  21. Benjamin Lincoln and the American Revolution
    Benjamin Lincoln and the American Revolution

  22. Under Custer's Command: The Civil War Journal of James Henry Avery
    Under Custer's Command: The Civil War Journal of James Henry Avery

  23. Lee in the Shadow of Washington (Conflicting Worlds)
    Lee in the Shadow of Washington (Conflicting Worlds)

  24. Irish Green and Union Blue: The Civil War Letters of Peter Welsh Color Sergeant 28th Massachusetts Volunteers
    Irish Green and Union Blue: The Civil War Letters of Peter Welsh Color Sergeant 28th Massachusetts Volunteers

  25. Forty-Six Years in the Army
    Forty-Six Years in the Army

Doc: Platoon Medic
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Another medic's review
  • Doc Evans still bandages the wounds of his brothers
  • A must read!
  • A Hands-Down Awesome Battle Memoir
  • It was like reliving the past
Doc: Platoon Medic
Daniel E. Evans Jr.
Manufacturer: Writers Club Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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Similar Items:
  1. Medic!: The Story of a Conscientious Objector in the Vietnam War
  2. Vietnam 1968-1969: A Battalion Surgeon Journal
  3. Doc: Heroic Stories of Medics,Corpsmen,and Surgeons in Combat
  4. Borrowed Time: A Medic's View of the Vietnam War
  5. Not On My Watch: The 21st Century Combat Medic

ASIN: 0595250513

Book Description

Dan Evans arrived in Vietnam on October 7, 1968, a 21- year-old Army medic who couldnÂ't stand the sight of blood. Thrust into the cauldron of combat, he soon became a seasoned veteran of emergency medicine and the brutal realties of war. Before his time was up, he would master the skills of a surgeon, acquire the patience of a saint, and demonstrate the courage of a lion.....

Here, in his own words, is the gripping true story of Dan Evans, the highly decorated soldier whom the men of First Platoon, Bravo Company, called the “fighting medic.” Whether skimming the treetops in a MEDEVAC chopper or slogging through the mangrove swamps with an M-16 in one hand and an aid kit in the other, Evans went too work when things went bad. His mission: treat the wounded amid the mud, blood and bullets, or die trying. Experience the rage, the sorrow and the remarkable spirit of Dan Evans - the PLATOON MEDIC who became a true American hero.

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Another medic's review.......2005-12-20

Great reading... great story... As with all of us who started at "Ft. Sam", everyone has a unique story... From my vantage point in the 2d bde, I have neverending comraderie with all those, as "Doc Evans", who came before and after to do their job as circumstances required. This is the real thing. (Couldn't edit the rating...meant it to be 5 Stars!!)

5 out of 5 stars Doc Evans still bandages the wounds of his brothers.......2004-04-12

Have you ever just known something you can't explain knowing? I have. I knew this book was going to be special before I even opened it. It has a vibe that I don't expect you to believe, but it does. Maybe it is because I share a sort of kinship with Mr. Evans. He was a corpsman who served in the Vietnam War. I was a medic myself for several years and though I have never felt a bullet whiz over my head or feared for my life, I have known the shame of not saving the life I had tried so hard to save. I have stood at a sink and kept scrubbing at the blood on my hands that had long since been scrubbed away and I can remember the screams of a father begging me to not let his child die. I have seen some things in my dreams that I do not need to share, but suffice to say Mr. Evans might understand. Sometimes only someone who has seen what you have seen can understand. I guess that is how I knew this book was for me.
This is a very good book. As it turns out, it was way better than "just" a good book. To say that implies that it is merely flat and plain and words on paper, as if it is something to pick up or put down at your leisure. In fact, it is none of those things. Mr. Evans' recollections have a life of their own; they pull you in to his thoughts and feelings, take you back to a place where you can feel the mud, imagine the leeches and sense the suffering. The young soldier's story is so real you will feel it brush across your face like a cobweb in the darkest corner of the attic. You will be leery to look into the attic for all the forgotten memories, lost souls and pain packed away in boxes. You would prefer to walk away or pretend you don't care. But that won't work. It is time to unpack. And you do care, or you would not be at this website, or looking at this book. It isn't going to be John Grisham or Danielle Steele. It is about a war that still divides opinion in this country and touched the lives of generations before and after those who served in it. Even though you may know the history of the war in Vietnam, you will find yourself wanting a second chance to do the right thing and to stand up to honor those who served our country - not just for Mr. Evans and the men he served with, but for America itself.

The author weaves his story the way a spider weaves its web: first one thread and then another, somehow tying each end together, forming a piece of art that is different than any other web. His web is strangely beautiful and a little scary at the same time. He is diligent, drawing each corner of his web to a proper angle, adhering it firmly to the doorway we must cross through to learn more. We are lucky indeed to find a man so willing to bare to the world what is so deeply, personally his. Imagine being a girl-chasing, car-loving, movie-going young man one moment and a hunted soldier the next? One moment being squeamish at the sight of blood and the next trying to treat a sucking chest wound. How can you explain to someone why something horribly and ghastly is hysterically funny? Do you tell them the truth - That laughing is the only way you can cope with such devastation and loss? How do you tell people that killing a man might be easy, when one moment it seems as if it is and the next it isn't? Can ordinary people understand how it comes to be that you don't recall what you had for dinner three days ago but you have instant and total recall of one single moment in your life in the jungle of Vietnam in 1968? Can they understand how the man you call your brother is no blood relation at all?

I think Mr. Evans answers every question when he puts words to his story and little pieces of his life on every page. He is a teacher, whether he knows it or not. I believe that anyone who reads this book will feel as if Mr. Evans has given them some tiny little bit of something they never had before. It could be they will learn that the Corpsman is probably the bravest, most selfless creation ever touched by the hand of God, just like a firefighter, because no matter what, when everyone else is running away from danger, they are running or crawling toward it. Or maybe the reader will find out that the Vietnam War was neither won nor lost. That it is not really over for most of the men and women who served there. Or maybe they will change their minds about something they used to believe was true. After all, that is what a teacher is supposed to do: open hearts and minds.

I believe Mr. Evans wanted to reach out to his veteran brothers to tell them he is still here, that he understands what they have gone through, because he went through it too. Maybe he is telling them they are not alone and there can be strength in knowing there are others to support them through a kinship and brotherhood. It seems to me Doc Evans is doing what he has always been destined to do: bandaging the wounds of his brothers.

5 out of 5 stars A must read!.......2003-06-02

Doc Evans not only tells it like it was, he makes his fellow grunts, like L. J. Henderson, and their heroism come alive in your mind. After reading Dr. Evans' book you won't want of miss two other books about the 4/39th during this same period; ...

5 out of 5 stars A Hands-Down Awesome Battle Memoir.......2003-01-18

I am a military physician and was serving in Afghanistan when I read Platoon Medic. I read the whole thing, cover-to-cover in a day and a half. It's simply a great book. It is a well-written, action-packed, gut-wrenching rocket ride through the hellish world of the combat medic in Vietnam. I felt like I was there in the rice paddies, watching Doc Evans patch up his bloody, dying comrades while the bullets were flying over his head. Dan Evans tells an astonishingly honest, important and poignant personal story. This book should be required reading for all Army medics and physicians. A great and important read.

5 out of 5 stars It was like reliving the past.......2002-10-08

As a Squad Leader of 2nd Squad, 1st Platoon, reading Dan's book years after experiencing it brough back a floor of memories. We lost some good men in our battles, but we'ed lost a hell of a lot more if it hadn't been for him and the other medic's. I was honored to proof read his story before it was published and when I did, it was hard to hold back the tear's from the memories it brough. I'am honored to know him and to be part of his story.
Doc. Platoon Medic- True story of Vietnam's most courageous warrior-healer
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Doc. Platoon Medic- True story of Vietnam's most courageous warrior-healer
    Daniel Evans Jr.
    Manufacturer: Pocket books
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover
    ASIN: 1568656637

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