The second shot A Green Beret's last mission

Gene Yu

Book - 2024

"Evelyn Chang and her husband were vacationing in the Philippines when they were ambushed by terrorists. Evelyn's husband was killed. She was kidnapped and disappeared into the lawless netherworld of the Sulu Archipelago. There was no hope of a rescue. Former Green Beret Gene Yu was five years out of the military, unemployed, and struggling with his transition back to the real world when Evelyn's family asked for help. His improbable mission: infiltrate one of the most dangerous corners of the world and get her back. Alone. Mindful of 'every young Asian kid in America struggling to fit into a dominant white culture,' Gene's harrowing, self-deprecating, and provocative memoir is really the story of two rescues. ...One, a personal liberation and the discovery of self-identity beyond both literal and figurative battlefields. The other is set amid the excruciating ordeals of a jungle war zone, where an Asian American man, once self-described as 'nobody squared,' defied all stereotypes and expectations to become a woman's last hope of survival"--Jacket.

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Little A [2024].
Language
English
Main Author
Gene Yu (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
217 pages : maps ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781662510564
9781662510540
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A former Green Beret reflects on how engineering an unsanctioned rescue mission in the Philippines helped him come to terms with a fractured, complex past. Born to Taiwanese parents in Boston, Yu spent his childhood trying to be "the perfect American boy," only to get treated like a foreigner in return. Later the family moved to the San Francisco Bay Area, where Yu suddenly found himself surrounded by other Asian Americans. Feeling alienated and rebellious, he grew his hair long, wore a black coat, and shoplifted books. In an ironic twist, one of the novels he stole, which centered on an Asian American graduate of West Point, gave him the direction he lacked. He set his sights on attending West Point, but by the end of the year, the academy had ranked him lowest in his class. Despite obstacles throughout college and later, during his distinguished service as a Green Beret, Yu always managed to get "second shots" that pushed him to excel and succeed. Questions about his ties to an uncle he barely knew but who happened to be the president of Taiwan eventually forced Yu to leave the military for a civilian career in Asia. A series of setbacks not long afterward sent his life into a tailspin, until a family friend named Angela Chang asked Yu to help find her kidnapped sister, Evelyn. Yu made a near-fatal error in judgment during the intrigue-filled rescue operation that followed, nearly costing Evelyn her life. Forced once again to confront failure--this time as a soldierand a good Chinese son--Yu not only succeeded in freeing the hostage from her terrorist captors but also himself from the lifelong internal "war" that raged between both sides of his identity. Inspiring, provocative reading. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.