
In the early morning hours of April 1, 1970, more than four hundred North Vietnamese soldiers charged out into the open and tried to overrun Fire Support Base Illingworth.
The battle went on, mostly in the dark, for hours. Exposed ammunition canisters were hit and blew up, causing a thunderous explosion inside the outpost that left dust so thick it jammed the handheld weapons of the GIs. Much of the combat became hand-to-hand. In all twenty five brave Americans lost their lives and another fifty-four were wounded. Nearly one-hundred enemy bodies were recovered. It was one of the most vicious small unit firefights in the history of US forces in Vietnam.
As in his acclaimed book, Blackhorse Riders, a finalist for the 2013 Colby Award and Silver Medalist for the 2013 Military Writer's Society Award in History, Phil Keith uncovers a harrowing true story of bravery and sacrifice by the men who fought valiantly to hold FSB Illingworth—a tale never before told and one that will not soon be forgotten.
--St. Martin's Press, October, 2013