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Robin Moore (1) (1925–2008)

Author of The French Connection

For other authors named Robin Moore, see the disambiguation page.

56+ Works 1,506 Members 25 Reviews

About the Author

Robert Lowell Moore Jr., was born on October 31, 1925 in Boston, Massachusetts. He attended Middlesex School, Belmont Hill School and Harvard College. He published several novels using information gathered from travelling and his experiences as main ideas. In 1963 he joined the US Army Special show more Forces as a civilian with special permission from President John F. Kennedy, . He trained for almost a year and then went with the Special Forces to Vietnam. His experiences in Vietnam served as the background material for "The Green Berets" which was published in 1965. Other titles include "The French connection" and the Happy Hooker. Robin Moore died February 21, 2008. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Robin Moore

The French Connection (1969) 308 copies, 4 reviews
The Green Berets (1965) 299 copies, 5 reviews
The Hunt for Bin Laden (2003) 212 copies, 7 reviews
The Accidental Pope: A Novel (2000) — Author — 93 copies, 3 reviews
Dubai (1976) — Author — 74 copies
The Fifth Estate (1973) 60 copies
The Country Team (1970) 26 copies
The Treasure Hunter (1974) 24 copies, 1 review
The Family Man (1974) 23 copies
French Connection II (1975) 20 copies
The Khaki Mafia (1972) 18 copies
The Moscow Connection (1994) 18 copies
The Devil To Pay (1991) 18 copies
Court Martial (1973) 17 copies
The Last Coming (1978) — Author — 16 copies
The Terminal Connection (1976) 14 copies
The Big Paddle (1978) 11 copies, 1 review
The set up (1975) 10 copies
Rhodesia (1977) 9 copies
The White Tribe (1991) 8 copies
Aloha (1976) 8 copies
Force Nine (1986) 7 copies
Phase of Darkness (1974) 7 copies
The Washington connection (1977) 7 copies
The Kaufman Snatch (1976) 5 copies
Mafia Wife (1977) 5 copies
The Black Sea Caper (1978) 4 copies
Big Money (1983) 4 copies
Diamonds and Blood (1978) 4 copies
Blind Spot (1976) — Author — 4 copies
The Gold Connection (1980) 4 copies
Fast Shuffle (1981) 3 copies
The Cobra Team (1981) 3 copies
Valency Girl (1976) 3 copies
The Establishment (1976) 2 copies
Compulsion (1981) 2 copies
Sparrowhook Curse (1996) 2 copies
The Banksters (1977) 2 copies
Caribbean Caper (1976) 2 copies
Only the Hyenas Laughed (1977) 2 copies
KABADAYI 1 copy
The Edge of The Pond (1976) 1 copy
Die roten Falken (1983) 1 copy

Associated Works

The French Connection [1971 film] (1971) — Original book — 189 copies, 4 reviews

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Reviews

For more reviews and bookish posts please visit https://www.ManOfLaBook.com

The Wars of the Green Berets: Amazing Stories from Vietnam to Present Day by Michael Lennon and Robin Moore brings forth fictionalized accounts of Green Beret operations from the 1950s to the first Gulf War. Mr. Moore is a published writer, and also co-wrote the lyrics for the famous Ballad of the Green Berets (1966).

I did not know that this book was fiction, and frankly, I would have had a difficult time figuring it out if it wasn’t disclosed to me by the book’s description. The stories are told through the fictional eyes of a bunch of characters engaged in conflicts in Vietnam, the Persian Gulf, Somalia, Afghanistan, as well as Iraq.

There are a lot of historical contexts, which I found to be very interesting, and some of it certainly enlightening. I liked reading about the tactics, as well as what it takes to become a Green Beret.

However, I felt that the conversations whose only purpose was to educate the reader were wooden and annoying. They did nothing to move the story forward and were ridiculous given the context.

I appreciate what the authors tried, and somewhat succeeded to do in this book. They brought together warriors of past decades and intertwined their fates. This was cleverly done, and as an amateur student of history, I was impressed to read of how past policies still have influences, as well as relevance, to current affairs. After all, history is fluid, actions have consequences, and these men felt it.

Many of the operations talked about were familiar to me from previous readings. But I could not shake off the feeling that I have read better, less clumsy, narratives of these events. I also disliked much of the preaching in the book, and the epilogue was just rambling which I thought could have been discarded. This is just me, however, I don’t like to be preached to no matter where I’m at.

Regardless of these minor issues, I learned several things from The Wars of the Green Berets: Amazing Stories from Vietnam to Present Day by Michael Lennon and Robin Moore, and had fun while I was at it. The fact that these are fictional narratives did nothing to distract from actual events.
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Flagged
ZoharLaor | Sep 12, 2022 |
Robin Moore tries to disguise the colonial war in Vietnam in the familiar guise of a crusade defending "American Values" against godless and brutal communism. But I prefer Rudyard Kipling's well crafted "Plain Tales From the Hills" and Bernard Fall's careful reportage when discussing colonial warfare.
½
 
Flagged
DinadansFriend | 4 other reviews | Jan 6, 2021 |
These are some amazing stories about Vietnam-era US Army Special Forces ("Green Berets") by an embedded reporter. It's hard to tell how much of this is accurate -- it was fictionalized for operational security reasons (among other reasons), but I believe it is widely perceived to be plausible/representative of that early stage of the conflict. I'm much more familiar personally with modern SF (2005-2010 or so), and this is pretty much another world from what "white" SF did in Iraq/Afghanistan, but that's because in those conflicts they were not really being used for their doctrinal mission, were kept on a short leash, and all the secret squirrel stuff was by definition done by JSOC.

The crazy thing (which could never happen today) is that the author went through Airborne/Jump School and SF training, and got very close to the action on various missions (to the level of carrying extra ammunition for others, but not generally a weapon.) At the time, SF wasn't directly fighting, just advising, so it is a little more understandable, but wow, times have changed.

Essentially, life at small bases, working with indigenous forces, struggles with the Republic of Vietnam government, interactions with CIA ("Combined Studies Group"), and some dirty tricks with agents (recruiting people who had personally been harmed by the communists, and operations across borders). Most of the stories are riveting while also being sad, and overall the whole thing is much sadder once you realize this was the early escalation phase of an ultimately doomed conflict.

A few of the stories seemed completely plausible -- details about how Vietnamese Government forces failed in the field, and politics between SF ODA and the conventional army. There was some weird fantasy stuff about running massive guerrilla operations with undercover networks and armies raised seems unlikely to have happened at that stage in the war.
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octal | 4 other reviews | Jan 1, 2021 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3381681.html

The book purports to be a journalistic account of the original heroin bust of 1962, but is clearly very fictionalised - verbatim dialogue and other incidental details inserted wholesale into the text, plus (perhaps more important) the third of the three detectives who actually solved the case is written out of history. It is very good on the detail of the heroin trade (largely absent from the film). It's also racist, sexist and homophobic.… (more)
 
Flagged
nwhyte | 3 other reviews | May 3, 2020 |

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