In The Other Vietnam War: A Helicopter Pilot's Life in Vietnam, Marc Cullison confronted the war that followed him home-the moral weight, the unanswered questions, and the memories that refused to fade. In Vietnam Again, he takes the next step: returning to the country itself.
Decades after flying combat missions as a U.S. Army helicopter pilot, Cullison travels back to Vietnam to walk the ground once seen only from the air. What he finds is not the battlefield of memory, but a nation transformed-alive with movement, resilience, and quiet grace. As past and present collide, Cullison reflects on how time reshapes trauma, how memory evolves, and how reconciliation can finally begin.
Written with the same clarity, humility, and emotional restraint that define The Other Vietnam War, this book deepens Cullison's exploration of what it means to live with war long after it ends. His reflections move beyond combat into the enduring human cost-on veterans, families, and identity itself.
Vietnam Again is both a continuation and a homecoming: a companion volume that completes a powerful reckoning with war, memory, and the long road toward understanding.