Getting Out of Saigon: How a 27-Year-Old Banker Saved 113 Vietnamese Civilians

(Author)
Available

Product Details

Price
$28.99  $26.96
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Publish Date
Pages
320
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.0 X 1.3 inches | 1.05 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781982195175

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About the Author

In 1973, Ralph White joined the Chase Manhattan Bank and worked as a business development officer in Thailand and Hong Kong; during his tenure in Thailand, he was temporarily assigned to Vietnam to close the bank's Saigon branch as the city fell. Upon return to Chase's New York headquarters in 1981, he worked in the International Strategic Planning Division and was a Vice President when he left. Over the next twenty years, White worked as a business development officer with three foreign banks and earned an MBA at Columbia University. In 2009, he founded the Columbia Fiction Foundry, a writing workshop for alumni of Columbia University, as a shared interest group under the Office of Alumni and Development. Having served as the organization's president for its first decade, White now serves as its Chairman. He lives in New York City and Litchfield, Connecticut.

Reviews

"A must-read for those of us who were there, for those of us who watched the fall of Saigon on the six o'clock news, for all those who lived through that dark period of American history, and for a younger generation who have seen the documentaries and read the books. Ralph White's Getting Out of Saigon opens old wounds, but also heals. An amazing tour de force and a stunning human drama set against the cataclysm of a lost war."--Nelson DeMille, bestselling novelist and former U.S. Army first lieutenant in the First Cavalry Division, Vietnam 1967-1968
"A unique, gripping story from the Vietnam War....White's persona seems like something out of a Terry Southern or Ian Fleming novel--as does his writing. White tells his inspiring story with wit, panache, humility, and a captivating sense of time and place. A fantastic read."-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"
"[A] stirring debut. . . . A propulsive and suspenseful narrative. . . . What [White] modestly refers to as his 15 minutes of fame is made more resonant by his deep humanity."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"By turns harrowing, enchanting, and leavened with a humor as dark as Saigon's quayside alleys, Ralph White's Getting Out of Saigon belongs on your bookshelf between Graham Greene and Neil Sheehan. Like Greene, White is a mesmerizing tour guide whose tale of rescuing over 100 Vietnamese civilians from the besieged capital city is as poignant as it is eerily prescient."--Bob Drury and Tom Clavin, coauthors of Last Men Out: The True Story of America's Heroic Final Hours in Vietnam
"[An] enthralling story."-- "Library Journal (starred review)"
"In the history of the Chase Manhattan Bank, one event stands out as clarifying the bank's responsibility to its employees. In 1975, Chase sent Ralph White to rescue its Vietnamese employees before the fall of Saigon. Only in retrospect do we now know how desperate those employees were, or how extraordinary were the obstacles White faced in rescuing them."--Anthony Terracciano, former vice chairman of the Chase Manhattan Corporation
"Ralph White has written a thrilling account of how he defied the American Ambassador and succeeded in evacuating more than a hundred South Vietnamese employees of the Chase Manhattan Bank in Saigon less than a week before the fall of Saigon. He has succeeded in transforming his own Profile in Courage moment into an inspiring and timeless story that is particularly relevant today, when many in government, politics, and business have been called on to decide whether or not to take great risks and follow the dictates of their consciences."--Thurston Clarke, author of Honorable Exit: How a Few Brave Americans Risked All to Save Our Vietnamese Allies at the End of the War
"An edge-of-your-seat, too-insane-not-to-be-true story."-- "OprahDaily.com"
"Captivating....It's hard not to admire [White] for his pluckiness in the face of bureaucratic indifference as well as his growth from a risk-taking adventurer into a humanitarian with genuine compassion for the Vietnamese whose lives depended on him."--Mark Atwood Lawrence "The Washington Post"
"[White's] well-documented, true story offers a gripping play-by-play about the choice to do what's right instead of what's authorized."-- "Christian Science Monitor"