Call Us : (845) 624-7100

Email : barrysestate@gmail.com

3
Dec

“You are a great example for everybody on the planet.”
—Don Imus, Imus In The Morning, Fox Business

Barry’s Book, Semper Cool, is for sale at bookstores nationwide. Ask for it at your favorite store today, or order online now!

Amazon.com | Barnes & Noble | Books-A-Million

It is also available in Kindle E-book and NOOK E-book formats.



Editorial Reviews:

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

Many Vietnam veterans look back in anger on their wartime experiences, but Fixler, who endured one of the bloodiest battles of the war, isn’t one of them. The gruesome 77 days he spent defending an isolated hilltop near the border with North Vietnam forms the core of this nostalgic memoir. Growing up in a predominately middle-class Jewish neighborhood, Fixler was dazzled by his father’s stories of WWII and volunteered for Vietnam to earn his respect. As a teen, Fixler got into his fair share of trouble and that cockiness seeps into these pages. Arrival at the Marine Corps’ Parris Island boot camp is compared to “being thrown into a Nazi concentration camp.” He celebrates his sexual escapades and never sugarcoats the nasty business of war; he’d do “everything again in heartbeat.” Yet as wistful as he is about the “discipline” and “camaraderie” of the Corps, he’s unrelenting in his scorn for the soldiers who return in psychological pieces, suggesting that soldiers should just get used to killing. Nowhere near the league of We Were Soldiers Once…and Young, Fixler is nonetheless an intriguing, rare bird: a man who survived “hell in the raw” without a trace of trauma–or remorse.

Copyright 2011 PWxyz, LLC


FOREWORD REVIEWS

Most books about Vietnam (e.g., The Things They Carried, Born on the Fourth of July) would not be described as optimistic. Despite its upbeat title, Barry Fixler’s Semper Cool isn’t all that optimistic, either. It’s an unabashedly honest memoir without a trace of touchy-feely sentiment.

Fixler grew up in suburban Long Island, New York, as a privileged troublemaker. Though he never wanted for anything—by age sixteen he had a horse, two cars, and a motorcycle—he was determined to be cool, which led to joy rides, petty theft, and the occasional fistfight. Seemingly the only thing he respected were the Marines, whom he learned about through his father’s World War II stories. They made an impression: Without telling his parents, Fixler joined the Marines as a high school senior. “I wasn’t a bad kid,” Fixler writes, “but I just had this gut feeling that I needed more discipline, and I wanted excitement and adventure.”

Later he adds, “All I thought about was adventure and surviving boot camp. I almost forgot the part after that: we all go off to war.” And he did, spending 1967 and 1968 in Vietnam. Most of the book recounts that time, with the best parts focusing on the massive uncertainty and terror surrounding preparation and combat time.

Regarding boot camp at Parris Island, Fixler recalls that he and his fellow recruits were “so bewildered and isolated from the civilian world that it was easy to imagine [drill sergeants] killing us and getting away with it.” As an experienced Marine during the epic, gruesome battle at Khe Sanh, Fixler faces an impossible task: leading a new wave of green, scared Marines that replaced the injured and the dead. “In no way could I show fear to the new guys. I had to raise my confidence to a new level,” he writes. “Those guys picked up on that real fast, and pretty soon, the ones who survived, they talked the same [way].”

Fixler also writes extensively about his life after Vietnam, which includes foiling an armed robbery attempt at his jewelry store and raising funds to treat a Marine who was nearly killed in Iraq. The self-congratulatory tone of those tales somewhat deflates the book’s raw energy and emotion, but it doesn’t tarnish an amazing accomplishment: Fixler entered a gruesome war and emerged as a physically and emotionally whole patriot.

Copyright 2011 Foreword Reviews


MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW

Semper Cool: One Marine’s Fond Memories of Vietnam is the true-life memoir of a Vietnam veteran. Author Barry Fixler enlisted in the United States Marine Corps as a teenager; he experienced terrible violence and hand-to-hand combat at the Siege of Khe Sanh, and gives the reader a boots-on-the-ground view of war. Yet he had positive as well as negative experiences, and ultimately the hardships he endured shaped him into a patriotic American. His story is captivating, inspirational, and unflinching in its chronicle of the good, the bad, and the ugly of war. Through the Barry Fixler Foundation, the author seeks to raise at least one million dollars to benefit physically wounded veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan – one hundred percent of the author’s royalties from “Semper Cool” will be donated to this worthy cause.

Copyright 2011 Midwest Book Review



MILITARY WRITERS SOCIETY OF AMERICA

SEMPER COOL is an outstanding account of the author’s experiences as a Marine in Viet Nam in 1967–1968, and how those experiences have affected his post-war life. Fixler takes a refreshingly positive and matter-of-fact approach in telling his story. He doesn’t gloss over the evils and terror of the war, but addresses them in a way that makes the events real to the reader, yet easy to read. Being a survivor of Khe Sanh certainly gives the author the distinction and credibility of being able to tell a story that few others are around with the insight to tell. The fact that Fixler is to this day still proud of being a Marine and proud of his country is effectively conveyed and gives SEMPER COOL a positive flow that I liked. He also is very effective in relating how the experiences from being a Marine, and perhaps more specifically, one who served and survived in Viet Nam, have had a significant influence on his reactions to a few recent events in his life.

This book is very well presented. I enjoyed reading it and recommend it to everyone who is interested in learning more about the battle of Khe Sanh, what a Marine’s life was like in the Viet Nam war, and to all who consider themselves genuine military history buffs.

Review by Bob Doerr, MWSA Reviewer (January 2011). Copyright 2011 Military Writers Society of America



THE VVA VETERAN

Barry Fixler seems to have loved every minute of his time in the U.S. Marine Corps, including sustained vicious combat in Vietnam. The book’s cover photo, for one thing, shows him grinning widely as he cradles the skull of an NVA soldier. That fondness for war is the overriding message in Fixler’s memoir, Semper Cool: One Marine’s Fond Memories of Vietnam (Exalt Press New York, 320 pp., $25.95). Fixler joined the Marines at eighteen just of of high school after a trouble-making adolescence. He thrived in the Marine Corps, including during his time in the thick of things at Khe Sanh. His blunt recreating of his war-time experiences is well done and evocative.

Fixler is on less solid ground, though, with his views on post-traumatic stress disorder. Fixler says he simply “doesn’t believe in” PTSD, and goes on to imply that war veterans would be fine if they emulated what he did when he came home and “went on with life.” His advice on how to prevent PTSD among U.S. Military Academy graduates in the future: “When we kill a bad guy in Iraq, when we blow their skulls apart, we should freeze that body and send it to West Point and scatter it around so you smell the blood and the horror and get used to fighting that way. If you’re fighting with blood and dead Iraqis all over the place, it will be nothing. That’s what needs to be done. Period.” Fixler is donating the book’s proceeds to wounded veterans. His website is www.sempercool.com

Review by Marc Leepson, Book Editor, VVA Veteran. Copyright 2011 Vietnam Veterans of America, Inc.


|

If you would like to review Semper Cool follow this link to request a review copy: www.sempercool.com/press-kit/review-copies/

Trademarks and logos used on this page are the property of their respective owners and do not imply endorsement or affiliation with Semper Cool beyond that expressed in the posted reviews.

Category : News & Media | Videos
2
Dec


Related:
Sell Gold Nanuet, NY
Where to Sell Gold Rockland County NY
Highest Price for Scrap Gold Nanuet, NY
How Much is My Gold Worth, Nanuet NY

Category : News & Media | Videos
1
Dec


Barry Fixler was caught in the middle of an attempted robbery by two men with a pistol pointed at his face. Fixler quickly reacted, knocking the pistol away from one assailant and chasing them both out of the store, injuring one in the process. Fixler, a Vietnam veteran and Marine, used this first story for his book “Semper Cool: One Marine’s Fond Memories of Vietnam”. Robert Libetti visits Fixler in his store to hear more of the stories, including his role in the famed Battle of Khe Sanh, and how his uses his business to help out other veterans.

Category : News & Media | Videos
1
Jan

Barry’s Estate Jewelry is open on Mondays! If you are looking for a Rockland County jewelry stores that are open on Monday’s you’ll find that Barry’s is one of the only jewelry stores open on Mondays.

We buy gold and pay the highest prices for old, broken and unwanted gold jewelry

We sell fine jewelry, estate jewelry, custom designed jewelry and specialize in engagement ring settings with G.I.A graded diamonds.

Sell Gold Nanuet

Nanuet Gold Buyers

Rockland County Jewelry Stores Open Monday

New City Jewelry Stores

Gold Buyers New City NY

Cash for Gold New City NY

Cash For Gold Nanuet NY

Cash for Gold Nyack NY

Where to get the highest prices for gold New York

Category : Uncategorized
23
May

Category : Gold Buyer Nanuet NY | News & Media | Videos
10
Aug

Sell Gold Hudson Valley at Barry’s Estate Jewelry

(08/10/11) BARDONIA – As stocks continue to take a hit this week, the price of gold has reached record highs, rising above $1,800 per ounce for the first time.

At Barry’s Estate Jewelry in Bardonia, many people are showing up to cash out on gold jewelry, literally walking in with discarded backs of broken watches or mismatched earrings and walking out with big bucks.

Jeweler Barry Fixler says he thinks the price per ounce for gold will likely soar to $2,000 within the next few weeks.

Category : Uncategorized
8
Aug

I’ve updated my website to better serve those of you living or shopping in Nanuet, NY. It was brought to my attention that Google was delivering other Nanuet NY gold buyer websites ahead of Barry’s Estate Jewelry for the term Gold Buyer Nanuet NY. In fact, on of the gold buyers they are serving ahead of Barry’s Estate Jewelry may not even be a Nanuet, NY gold buyer. Technically, Barry’s Estate Jewelry is in Bardonia, but Bardonia is so close to Nanuet NY that they are essentially the same. We have the same zip code as Nanuet NY, the 10954 zip code, which is on my precious metal license. This is the license that allows Barry’s Estate Jewelry to be a “licensed” gold buyer Nanuet, NY. So, if you are in Rockland County, Westchester County, Orange County, or Bergen County (Park Ridge) it pays to know that Barry’s Estate Jewelry is the best gold buyer (Nanuet / Bardonia) and pays the highest price for scrap gold. And when you mention this website you’ll get an EXTRA 1% CASH FOR GOLD.

Because Barry’s Estate Jewelry is located in Bardonia, which is a suburb of Nanuet NY, you may have found this page by searching for:

Category : Gold Buyer Nanuet NY
2
Jul

Barry’s Notes: This article illustrates how important it is for gold sellers to do business with established gold buyers that have positive reputations. Barry’s Estate Jewelry is here for the long run!

N.J. slaps 49 businesses in gold buyback sweep

Newark, N.J.- State authorities have cited 49 New Jersey gold- and jewelry-buying businesses, including some retail jewelers, for committing numerous violations of state laws governing gold buybacks, the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office announced Thursday.

New Jersey’s Office of Weights and Measures has issued more than 1,600 summonses in the case following a just-concluded statewide sweep that found businesses were using inaccurate scales that didn’t weight items correctly and resulted in consumers receiving less money than they should have in exchange for their gold or jewelry. The civil penalty for each violation conviction ranges from $100 to $500, with the court setting the exact penalty.

According to a news release, the state office’s Precious Metals Task Force began the unannounced inspections in June after receiving a complaint from a consumer. The task force dropped in on jewelry stores as well as transient buyers of gold and jewelry who normally operate out of hotels and move around frequently.

“Some of the buyers defrauded consumers, short-weighting their items and likely paying them less than the true value of their items,” Attorney General Paula Dow said in the release. “We found violations statewide and we’re putting the industry on notice that we won’t tolerate the cheating of consumers.”

Among the confiscated items was a scale that had a spring mounted underneath its weighing platform that pushes back as items are weighed, producing an inaccurate reading. State officials displayed the scale along with other sweep paraphernalia at a press conference held Thursday in Avenel, N.J.

Consumers who need to sell their heirlooms and keepsakes to raise cash deserve to get every dollar that their gold, jewelry and precious metals are worth,” Thomas Calcagni, acting director of the state Division of Consumer Affairs, said in the release. “But buyers who use unapproved, uninspected or purposely tampered with scales are cheating consumers out of money.”

In addition to using scales that were unregistered, not inspected, not approved for use in New Jersey, unsealed and tampered with, businesses also received citations for not providing detailed receipts to sellers.

According to the release, New Jersey law dictates that consumers selling their items must receive detailed receipts that include information about the type of precious metal or item purchased, the fineness of the metal, the weights of the item purchased, the prices paid and the name and the address of the buyer. This information is important to the consumer as they may later want to dispute the transaction or reclaim their item within the 48 hours the buyers is required to hold on to it.

Transient gold and jewelry-buying businesses are required to post a $5,000 bond with the state in order to conduct business.

Links referenced within this article

Find this article at: National Jeweler

Category : Gold Buyer Nanuet NY