Kent State meticulously re-creates the divided cultural landscape of America during the Vietnam War and popular anxieties around the country. On college campuses, teach-ins, sit-down strikes, and demonstrations exposed the growing rift between the left and the right. Many students opposed the war as unjust and were uneasy over poor and working-class kids drafted and sent to Vietnam in their place. Some developed a hatred for the military, the police, and everything associated with authority, while others resolved to uphold law and order at any cost.
Focusing on the thirteen victims of the Kent State shooting and a painstaking reconstruction of the days surrounding it, historian Brian VanDeMark draws on crucial new research and interviews—including, for the first time, the perspective of guardsmen who were there. The result is a complete reckoning with the tragedy that marked the end of the sixties.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
August 13, 2024 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781696616232
- File size: 372377 KB
- Duration: 12:55:46
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
June 17, 2024
Historian VanDeMark (Road to Disaster) elicits a startling “belated confession” from former platoon sergeant Matt McManus in this fine-grained examination of the Kent State massacre. On May 4, 1970, Ohio National Guard troops opened fire on student antiwar demonstrators, killing four and wounding nine. The slayings triggered national outrage and decades of scrutiny over why the troops fired. VanDeMark’s account hinges on interviews with McManus, who claims he shouted an order to “fire in the air” that was misheard as an order to fire on the demonstrators. (He previously admitted giving such an order only after the shooting started.) In addition to showing how this possibility fits with witness testimony, VanDeMark also uses McManus’s account and his own exhaustive research into the shooting’s aftermath to paint both the guardsmen and the students as victims of a malfunctioning system. It’s a somewhat forced bit of bothsidesing that gives an uncomfortable pass to McManus for his years of evasiveness (“People don’t withhold the truth unless the whole truth is too much to bear,” VanDeMark asserts, a forgiving truism contradicted by McManus’s own tacit acknowledgment that he lied to avoid consequences). But VanDeMark’s thorough documentation of events is worthwhile, especially for its urgent warnings (“This could happen again easily, if students decide government put up for sale to the highest bidder,” one survivor says). It’s a significant discovery about an enduring mystery. -
AudioFile Magazine
Narrator Daniel Henning takes on this detailed account of the shooting by National Guardsmen of students who were protesting the Vietnam War at Kent State University in 1970. Presented as a timeline with context but few digressions, it recounts the events from all sides: the National Guard's, politicians', Kent State administrators', students', parents', and local residents'. Henning uses an unemotional tone for recounting events and delivers the interviews, news accounts, and court hearings in a higher pitch. He captures the heightened reactions to protests, shootings, and other civil unrest that eventually left four students dead and nine permanently injured in Ohio. Fifty-five years later, this fatal clash between Vietnam War protesters and the National Guard still sparks emotions, visceral reactions, and sorrow. M.B.K. © AudioFile 2025, Portland, Maine
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