April 2017 | Howard County Beacon

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The Howard County

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F O C U S

VOL.7, NO.4

F O R

P E O P L E

OV E R

When he volunteered to help doomed AIDS patients, he said, his often torturous memories receded. He has also spent two years working in homeless shelters, and seven years caring for dying patients in hospices. “I found that compassion heals,” he said. Nearly one out of every three Vietnam vets has suffered from PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder), according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The U.S. action in Iraq reportedly brought that condition to one out of every five vets. Glenn’s latest novel, Last of the Annamese has just been released by the Naval Institute Press. (“An Nam” was an old name for Vietnam.) The novel is set

APRIL 2017

I N S I D E …

PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHER MYERS

Healing by helping

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More than 30,000 readers throughout Howard County

Novels help heal war’s trauma By Robert Friedman For Ellicott City resident Tom Glenn, 80, “Not to write would be to accept damnation. If I gave up writing, my spiritual life would come to an end. I would be a husk, and cease to be a human being.” For Glenn, you see, writing is not only a compulsion — “I’ve been writing since I was 6 years old” — but also a therapy. It eases the post-traumatic stress that remains from the worst parts of the 13 years (1962-1975) he spent in Vietnam — whether in combat situations, or during a last-minute harrowing escape from Saigon as the city fell to the North Vietnamese, marking the humiliating end of the U.S. intervention there. Since then, while suffering from what he calls his post traumatic stress injury — he doesn’t believe the word “disorder” should be used for what is, after all, a war wound — Glenn has eased the troubling symptoms by writing four novels. Three are about Vietnam, and the fourth is about his five years caring for AIDS patients. “The wound to your mind means that you have been through something so ghastly you never get over it,” he said. After 42 years, since returning to the states, “I still have nightmares, flashbacks, but they are less frequent now.” Divorced, he lives alone, doesn’t own a TV, and spends his time reading, reading and writing, writing.

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Québec City: for all things French without going to France; plus, inexpensive but worthy Rust Belt destinations page 30

ARTS & STYLE Tom Glenn’s new novel Last of the Annamese, published in March, is set during the fall of Saigon to the North Vietnamese. The Ellicott City resident says his writing serves as a sort of therapy to help heal the trauma he witnessed while serving in Vietnam for 13 years, most of them as a spy.

mostly in Saigon as the events of the fall unfold, and the protagonists make heartbreaking choices. The novel has been called a companion piece to Graham Greene’s The Quiet American in its accent on the devastating effects of the war on individuals — both Vietnamese and American — rather than being a strictly G.I. view, as are most of the classic books of the Vietnam War, such as The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien or Dispatches by Michael Herr.

A spy, not a soldier

One of the three main characters is Chuck Griffin, a retired Marine doing intelligence work in Vietnam for the United States. Not coincidentally of course, after his three years in the U.S. Army, Glenn

spent his time in Vietnam gathering intelligence for the National Security Agency. The other two principal protagonists are Vietnamese, and their lives, passions and points of view are thoroughly and sympathetically explored. What did Glenn’s real-life “spying” activities consist of? “What I can say is that I was frequently able to target the enemy, since I discovered where they were and what they were doing [by intercepting communications], and I was forewarned of attacks against U.S. forces,” said Glenn, who is fluent in Vietnamese, Chinese and French, among other languages. His work brought him into Army and See NOVELIST, page 35

Venus Theatre presents a series of one-act British plays about women’s suffrage in the early 1900s page 34

TECHNOLOGY k Is your fridge eavesdropping?

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FITNESS & HEALTH 6 k Thyroid problems easily solved k Options for treating sciatica THE 50+ CONNECTION 17 k Newsletter from Howard County Office on Aging and Independence LAW & MONEY 25 k How to file your taxes for free k Getting a good deal on a car ADVERTISER DIRECTORY

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