Vincent Williams had it all figured out. At nineteen, he was the lead guitarist and songwriter for Electric Harvest, a promising rock band from Poughkeepsie, New York, with dreams of making it big in the music scene that was transforming America in 1968.
Then his draft notice arrived.
Torn from his world of guitar riffs and basement rehearsals, Vincent finds himself thrust into the brutal reality of the Vietnam War. Carrying an M-16 instead of a Fender, learning to survive in the jungles of Southeast Asia with Alpha Company of the legendary Big Red One, he discovers that the music industry's cutthroat competition was nothing compared to actual combat.
But even in the hell of war, Vincent can't silence the songs in his head. Through letters home, lyrics scribbled in foxholes, and the unbreakable bonds forged with his fellow soldiers, he struggles to hold onto the artist he once was while becoming the warrior he must be to survive.
In the steaming jungles and fire-swept landing zones of Vietnam, Vincent learns that brotherhood is measured not in shared stages but in shared danger, that courage isn't the absence of fear but doing what's right despite being terrified, and that some prices are worth paying-even when the cost is everything.
From his last gig at O'Brien's Tavern to the killing fields of Operation Rock Crusher, Blood and Strings follows one young man's journey from dreamer to fighter, exploring how war changes us and what parts of ourselves we fight to keep alive when everything else is stripped away.
This is a story about music and war, about growing up too fast in circumstances no training can prepare you for, and about the songs that play in our hearts long after the amplifiers fall silent.
For readers who loved The Things They Carried, Matterhorn, and Born on the Fourth of July-an unforgettable tale of sacrifice, brotherhood, and the power of music to survive even the darkest chapters of the human experience.