
Done in a Day
Telex from the Fall of Saigon Named one of Lit Hub's most anticipated books of the year. A searing reflection on the last day of the Vietnam War and the beginning of the end of foreign reporting in the nationâs daily newspapers.Â
Done in a Day turns on a single event: the April 30, 1975, departure of the last helicopter evacuating civilians from the rooftop of the US embassy in Saigon. Elisa Tamarkinâs interest in that helicopter begins with the fact that her stepfather, the Saigon bureau chief for the Chicago Daily News, was on itâthe last American correspondent to leave Saigon as it fell. His report was filed from a naval ship on the South China Sea at a time when no other telexes were going through.
Now, more than fifty years later, Tamarkin offers a social and cultural autopsy of that moment, based in personal history but vividly unfolding amid the vast documentation of Americaâs obvious defeat, which never seemed to register even as it got out, in the writings of journalists and essayists, in the backchannel cables between US ambassador Graham Martin and Henry Kissinger, in congressional hearings, and in photographs of the warâs end. The story is also set against the imminent disappearance of war coverage in city newspapersâand of the newspapers themselvesâonce proud, in the words of the Chicago Daily News, of bringing readers the âliterature of the dayâ that was âdone in a day.â
Done in a Day braids history, criticism, and memoir to tell the paired stories of Saigonâs liberation and the demise of the news. The result is a haunting essay about all that ended in a dayâand about what it means to recognize and to write about endings even as we live through them.
Telex from the Fall of Saigon Named one of Lit Hub's most anticipated books of the year. A searing reflection on the last day of the Vietnam War and the beginning of the end of foreign reporting in the nationâs daily newspapers.Â
Done in a Day turns on a single event: the April 30, 1975, departure of the last helicopter evacuating civilians from the rooftop of the US embassy in Saigon. Elisa Tamarkinâs interest in that helicopter begins with the fact that her stepfather, the Saigon bureau chief for the Chicago Daily News, was on itâthe last American correspondent to leave Saigon as it fell. His report was filed from a naval ship on the South China Sea at a time when no other telexes were going through.
Now, more than fifty years later, Tamarkin offers a social and cultural autopsy of that moment, based in personal history but vividly unfolding amid the vast documentation of Americaâs obvious defeat, which never seemed to register even as it got out, in the writings of journalists and essayists, in the backchannel cables between US ambassador Graham Martin and Henry Kissinger, in congressional hearings, and in photographs of the warâs end. The story is also set against the imminent disappearance of war coverage in city newspapersâand of the newspapers themselvesâonce proud, in the words of the Chicago Daily News, of bringing readers the âliterature of the dayâ that was âdone in a day.â
Done in a Day braids history, criticism, and memoir to tell the paired stories of Saigonâs liberation and the demise of the news. The result is a haunting essay about all that ended in a dayâand about what it means to recognize and to write about endings even as we live through them.
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$16.92Description
Telex from the Fall of Saigon Named one of Lit Hub's most anticipated books of the year. A searing reflection on the last day of the Vietnam War and the beginning of the end of foreign reporting in the nationâs daily newspapers.Â
Done in a Day turns on a single event: the April 30, 1975, departure of the last helicopter evacuating civilians from the rooftop of the US embassy in Saigon. Elisa Tamarkinâs interest in that helicopter begins with the fact that her stepfather, the Saigon bureau chief for the Chicago Daily News, was on itâthe last American correspondent to leave Saigon as it fell. His report was filed from a naval ship on the South China Sea at a time when no other telexes were going through.
Now, more than fifty years later, Tamarkin offers a social and cultural autopsy of that moment, based in personal history but vividly unfolding amid the vast documentation of Americaâs obvious defeat, which never seemed to register even as it got out, in the writings of journalists and essayists, in the backchannel cables between US ambassador Graham Martin and Henry Kissinger, in congressional hearings, and in photographs of the warâs end. The story is also set against the imminent disappearance of war coverage in city newspapersâand of the newspapers themselvesâonce proud, in the words of the Chicago Daily News, of bringing readers the âliterature of the dayâ that was âdone in a day.â
Done in a Day braids history, criticism, and memoir to tell the paired stories of Saigonâs liberation and the demise of the news. The result is a haunting essay about all that ended in a dayâand about what it means to recognize and to write about endings even as we live through them.










