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Wizard 6
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Wizard 6: A Combat Psychiatrist in Vietnam.
By Douglas Bey. College Station: Texas A&M University Press,
2006. ISBN 1-58544-519-3. Photographs. Index. Pp. xii, 280. $19.95.
In 1969, when Dr. Douglas Bey, a newly minted captain in
the Army Medical Corps, arrived in Vietnam for a tour of duty as division
psychiatrist to the 1st Infantry Division, he was greeted, as were so many
before him, with catcalls, the kindest of which was "What a bunch of sorry
mothers." Stumbling out of the plane and sinking into the dense heat
stirred only by the insults of the happy, jeering men lined up for the return
flight, Bey felt as though he were "going through the looking glass in
Alice in Wonderland and entering a parallel existence." It is a strength of
this memoir that it eschews regaling the reader with "just a collection of
humorous anecdotes" about this strange, alternate universe. The tale
abounds with such anecdotes, enough to make it entertaining, but these never get
in the way of Bey's thoughtful observations about the bizarre, often
frightening, and frequently exquisitely boring realities of life with an
infantry division in a combat zone. Bey opens with a description of himself as a
young, immature workaholic graduating from the Menninger Foundation just in time
to heed his country's call for psychiatric professionals to serve in Vietnam.
This allows the reader to gauge, over the course of the memoir, how the author's
younger self coped with, and was shaped by, the experiences. His second, and
lengthy, chapter paints a compelling picture of the world on the other side of
the looking glass, a world that required learning a myriad of regs and
procedures, developing a shell of coping skills rooted for the most part in
denial and gallows humor, finding his place in the informal pecking order, and
acquiring a new jargon, much of it obscene, though with a touch of whimsy at
times. His title, Wizard 6, for example, refers to his radio call name in the
1st Infantry Division, which identified him as the division psychiatrist (the
Wizard) and as the chief, also known as "6" for the one in charge.
Bey's narrative, besides being highly readable, covers a
lot of bases. He sheds light on the raw tensions between black and white
soldiers, describes how his team diagnosed and treated patients in the division,
provided health care to civilians, and identified high-risk individuals and (extra)high-stress
combat situations in order to recommend morale-boosting solutions. He gives
contextual depth by slipping in factual and historical data about American
military psychiatry in small, painless, and helpful doses. And he broadens his
scope to describe the Viet Cong's perception of mental illness, which leaned
heavily on supernatural models. In a more personal vein he paints a bittersweet
picture of how he and his fellows "cop[ed] with Vietnam" by putting
the "world" out of mind and focusing on work, self-medicating with
alcohol, cultivating a "counterphobic" bravado, tweaking the Regular
Army's careerism, getting away on R&R, and above all by tapping into the
camaraderie forged by adversity. His evolution from callow youth, through callow
angst-ridden officer, through callow but slowly maturing manhood is, by itself,
a well-told tale. General readers with an interest in the Vietnam experience
will find this book entertaining and informative. Although the book lacks depth
of research, even academics will find it a worthwhile "primary"
account of how one division's mental health team turned abstract psychiatric
principles into meaningful practical applications in the field.
Maureen T. Moore Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts
JOURNAL OF MILITARY HISTORY
2007, VOL 71; NUMB 1,
THE VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE
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