"The subject matter of the book demands sensitivity and finesse—in addressing the biographies at the heart of the memorial, the processes through which a society comes to terms with a painful past, and the relationship between individual and societal processes of remembrance. In Trout, the memorial at Angel Fire has found a scholar worthy of tackling these engaging problems."—American Historical Review
"An engaging work, The Vietnam Veterans Memorial at Angel Fire is a welcome addition to the literature seeking to understand the complex legacy of one of America’s longest wars."—G. Kurt Piehler, Home Front Studies
“The Vietnam Veterans Memorial at Angel Fire: War, Remembrance, and an American Tragedy is an engaging narrative on the fascinating story of the creation of an essential memorial that set the stage for the national one in Washington, DC. Steven Trout’s extensive research and lively storytelling on this significant topic contributes meaningfully to our understanding of the Vietnam War and its role in our national memory. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial at Angel Fire is a dramatic human interest story, well told, and highly recommended.”—Kyle Longley, author of The Morenci Marines: A Tale of Small Town America and the Vietnam War
“Combining biography, history, and memory, Steven Trout has given us an insightful and clear-eyed view of the first national Vietnam veterans memorial and the family that constructed it. Along the way he skillfully assesses the complex, conflicting, and evolving meanings of an idiosyncratic site of remembrance that was intended to honor both military service and the quest for peace.”—Christian G. Appy, author of American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity
“Anyone who cares about the Vietnam War and American history and memory will wish to read Steven Trout’s The Vietnam Veterans Memorial at Angel Fire. In clear, powerful, compassionate prose Trout chronicles the genesis and subsequent history of this remarkable project in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of New Mexico, begun while the war still raged in 1970 by Victor and Jeanne Westfall to honor the memory of their son David, a US Marine rifle platoon leader killed in Vietnam. Far in advance of the eventual completion of the Vietnam Wall in Washington, DC, the memorial at Angel Fire acquired a prominent set of outside participants, including future US senator John Kerry representing the Vietnam Veterans Against the War and the distinguished Vietnam War journalist Gloria Emerson, author of Winners and Losers. The Angel Fire Memorial still exists today, begun by family, friends, and neighbors and still memorable nationally for the many brave years of its early service as the first and only Vietnam War memorial in the United States.”—Philip Beidler, professor emeritus of American literature, University of Alabama