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Granta 15: The Fall of Saigon

Ten years ago, James Fenton went to Saigon, having made up his mind that, no matter what happened, he was not going to miss what he had travelled 10,000 miles to see: a Communist victory. And so he remained, long after the US troops and most members of the western press had been evacuated. He remained for, and even participated in , the looting of the US Embassy. And when the first North Vietnamese tank entereed the city, lost, unable to make its way through Saigon’s maze of streets, James Fenton jumped on the back, an unlikely navigator, directing the tank commander to the Presidential Palace. And still Fenton remained, until three months later, without food or money or clothes, wandering around a city transformed, he finally made his way back home.

Witty, bizarre, and verging on the lunatic – who in his right mind would gatecrash an embassy on the back of an invading army’s tank? – James Fenton’s account of the fall of Saigon is an extraordinary record of the collapse of a city at war. Plus: Nadine Gordimer, George Steiner, Günter Grass, Salman Rushdie, John Berger and Ryszard Kapuscinski’s ‘Warsaw Diary’.

‘One of the finest pieces of reportage I’ve ever seen.’ Sunday Times

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In this issue

Richard Ford: On Harley-Davidson
Philip Norman: Grandma Norman and the Queen
James Fenton: The Fall of Saigon
Frank Snepp:Toothpaste
Norman Podhoretz: Misreading Vietnam (originally published as 'Impotence')
Noam Chomsky: Dominoes
Nadine Gordimer: The Essential Gesture: Writers and Responsilbility
Nadine Gordimer: What were You dreaming?
George Steiner: A Conversation Piece
Salman Rushdie: On Günter Grass
Günter Grass: The Tin Drum In Retrospect
John Berger: Go ask the Time
Ryszard Kapuscinski: A Warsaw Diary
Marilynne Robinson: The waste Land
Michael Crick: Reporting The Strike
Peter Greig: Revelations
Ted Solotaroff: Writing in the cold