In this powerful story collection, Susan O'Neill offers a remarkable view of the war from a female perspective. All the nurses who served there had a common goal to attend to the wounded. While men were sent to protect America's interests at any cost, nurses were trained to save the lives of anyonesoldier or citizen, ally or enemywho was brought through the hospital doors. It was an important distinction in a place where killing was sometimes the only objective. And since they were so vastly outnumbered, women inevitably became objects of both reverence and sexual desire. For American nurses in Vietnam, and the men among whom they worked and lived, a common defense against the steady onslaught of dead and dying, wounded and maimed, was a feigned indifferencethe irony of the powerless. With the assistance of alcohol, drugs, and casual sex, "Don't mean nothing" became their mantra, a means of coping with the other warthe war against total mental breakdown. Each of these tales offers new and profound insight into the ways the war in Vietnam forever changed the lives of everyone who served there.