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The Greatest Beer Run Ever
The Greatest Beer Run Ever: A True Story of Friendship Stronger Than War | John (Chick) Donohue, J T Molloy
7 posts | 6 read | 2 to read
In 1967, John (Chick) Donohue was a 26-year-old U.S. Marine Corps veteran working as a merchant seaman when he was challenged one night in a New York City bar. The men gathered at this hearth had lost family and friends in the ongoing war in Vietnam. Now, they were seeing protesters turn on the troops. One neighborhood patriot proposed an idea many might deem preposterous: One of them should sneak into Vietnam, track down their buddies in combat, and give each of them messages of support from back home, maybe some laughs - and beer. Chick volunteered for the mission. He sailed to Vietnam on a cargo ship carrying a backpack full of American beer, landing in Qui Nho'n in 1968. Things went awry when Chick got caught in the Tet Offensive, starting in the early hours as an eyewitness to the battle to retake the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, where he became stuck for months. Chick Donohue later became legendary as "the sandhog who went to Harvard." He worked for decades on behalf of New York's tunnel builders as the legislative and political director of Sandhogs Local 147. This is the story of his epic beer run to Vietnam, in his own words and in those of the men he found in the war zone. "'The Greatest Beer Run Ever' is the astounding true story of a young man's odyssey. On these pages we accompany Chick Donohue as he takes us on a fantastic voyage from the streets of Manhattan via the high seas to the jungles and cities of Vietnam at the height of a war fought mostly by forgotten blue collar kids. Back in 1968, Donohue was a man on a singular mission - to prove to the soldiers and Marines from the neighborhood that they were not forgotten and never would be. On the way, Donohue lets no obstacle get in his way - not bemused military officials startled by his presence in a combat zone nor Viet Cong rocket fire. This book is both a testament to the fading notions of loyalty and brotherhood and an elegy for the working class enclaves that once formed the backbone of a city and nation." - THOMAS KELLY, Author of "Payback," "The Rackets," and "Empire Rising" and executive producer, "Copper," "The Get Down," and "Civil" "What a great story!" - FIRST LIEUT. BRIAN MILES THACKER, Recipient, Medal of Honor
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BookNAround
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Pre-reading another Christmas gift.

57 likes1 stack add
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Momtoeveryone86
Pickpick

So good that they‘re turning it into a movie! This isn‘t like other Vietnam biographies. This one is telling of travels, hardship, friendship, and has a (mostly) happy ending.

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Sleepswithbooks
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“Only 0.5 percent of Americans serve in the military, but 100 percent of us benefit. Thank you.”

The gang back together 50 years later: Rick Dugan, Tommy Collins, “Chick” Donohue (author), Kevin McLoone, and Bobby Pappas.

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Librarybelle
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Mehso-so

In this short memoir, Chick recounts his journey to Vietnam to bring friends from his NYC neighborhood a beer, in a gesture of support during the Vietnam War. Chick witnesses the war firsthand, and his story includes some gut wrenching situations.

At times, it seemed almost unbelievable that a non-military man could do what he did to get around in Vietnam. I also did not quite connect with the writing style. ⬇️⬇️⬇️

Librarybelle Yet, this is a unique view of a country in very contentious times. It certainly showed me parts of the area and the war of which I am not familiar, and Chick witnessed firsthand some major episodes in the war, being at the wrong time at the wrong time. This memoir would play out well on the big screen, and it is soon to be a major motion picture. 3y
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wen4blu
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And now for something completely different.

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TheAromaofBooks
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Pickpick

This one is another soft pick for me & another one that's a little difficult to review. The author was in his late 20s during the Vietnam War. He had been a Marine straight out of high school but was considered "too old" to enlist for Vietnam, so he was working as a merchant marine. When the war protests started to turn on the soldiers themselves, the guys from Chick's hangout-bar thought it would be amazing if someone could go visit all the ⬇️

TheAromaofBooks (cont'd) active duty guys from their neighborhood, take them some local beer, & reassure them that what they were doing was appreciated & they were missed & loved. Chick's job enabled him to hop on a boat headed to Vietnam with the idea that he would take 3 days shore leave when he got there & find some of the guys. What with one thing & another, his boat left without him, leaving him stranded in Vietnam in the days leading up to & the first ⬇ 4y
TheAromaofBooks (cont'd) couple of weeks of the Tet offensive.

Reading this book is basically like listening to your old uncle tell his stories from the war. It wasn't a bad book at all, but it did tend to ramble off & sometimes go into back stories not directly related to the main plot & it wasn't always easy to tell what was happening “now“ & what was an explanation from the past. (i.e. a few paragraphs telling a story to illustrate why Chick doesn't like ⬇
4y
TheAromaofBooks (cont'd) ship captains - it was hard to tell if it was THIS ship captain, or one from his past.) Chick is also very pro-unions, which I'm not against unions but I also got a little tired of every chapter having at least a few sentences explaining why unions are awesome & solve everyone's problems.

For the most part it doesn't get too political & there's some great perspective here on how basically the soldiers were just doing their best to do ⬇
4y
See All 11 Comments
TheAromaofBooks (cont'd) what they were told. Most of them had been drafted, they weren't passionate about being there, & they didn't have the ability to see any kind of big picture concerning how the Vietnamese people really felt about the situation. In the end, Chick decides that the protestors weren't wrong to protest the war, but still felt that harassing the young men being sent to fight wasn't the right way to execute that protest.

This is a memoir, so ⬇
4y
TheAromaofBooks (cont'd) it's inherently biased, but was overall an interesting read for a bit of a different look at the war - Chick is pro-soldier, but also a civilian. It was a pretty fast read & I appreciated that the author decided to keep the language pretty clean throughout.

#FoodandLit @Butterfinger @Texreader
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#FabulousFebruary - @Andrew65 I hit my page goal!! 2515 pages!!
4y
Elizabeth2 Great review! 4y
Butterfinger I'm glad you enjoyed it. My uncle will not talk to me about his experiences. 4y
TheAromaofBooks @Elizabeth2 - Thank you!! 4y
TheAromaofBooks @Butterfinger - my great-uncle, who is a very gentle, soft-spoken man from a family of gentle, soft-spoken people, was drafted to Vietnam & still does not speak of it & still, all these years later, regularly checks himself into the hospital because of severe depression/nightmares/PTSD. I think that was part of this author's point - that many of the soldiers were victims as well, not the “baby killers“ the protestors accused them of being. 😕 4y
Andrew65 Well done 👏👏👏 4y
Texreader @TheAromaofBooks Excellent review and so sad for your great-uncle. It‘s so good to get all these perspectives now. It sure helps us try to stay open-minded now about people‘s experiences. Thanks for this lengthy input about the book. I appreciated it. 4y
80 likes11 comments
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TheAromaofBooks
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#WeeklyForecast - A few holds came in from the library, and since they are newer books (& thus not renewable) they got bumped to the top of the list. Poor Ed McBain just never quite seems to reach the top!! Hopefully I will at least get as far as Lullaby this week!! Mansfield Park & Fantastic Beasts are current buddy reads. I actually already finished Gods of Jade & Shadow, & started the tagged for #FoodandLit.
@Cinfhen

Cinfhen Poor, Ed 😂😂 4y
Scochrane26 I‘m waiting impatiently for my signed copy of The Electric Kingdom to be delivered. The weather caused them to be late shipping the books. I don‘t usually buy hardbacks, but I‘m in love with that cover. (edited) 4y
TheAromaofBooks @Cinfhen - Part of it is that there are 55 books in the 87th Precinct series... these are books 41-45... I'm a little bit over these books, but am also determined to finish the series since I've gotten this far. All that to say, I'm not always sad when another book ditches in line! 😂 4y
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TheAromaofBooks @Scochrane26 - Yes!! I remember you mentioning that he's a local author; that's so fun!! I'm not sure why I got this one from the library instead of just ordering it because I've enjoyed/own his other books. Although getting it from the library means I'm on a deadline to actually read it!! 4y
Scochrane26 @TheAromaofBooks I often get books from the library & then buy them later if I love them enough. Electric Kingdom isn‘t my typical genre, but I bought it because I love his other books & for the cover. 4y
Mollyanna I got The Greatest Beer Run for Christmas. I‘ll be curious to hear your thoughts. 4y
Cinfhen Oh wow!!! You and Ed have been together a long time 😁 4y
82 likes7 comments