Robert Mason (writer)

Robert C. Mason is a Vietnam War veteran and author of several books, including his first, best-selling memoir: Chickenhawk (1983). Mason piloted Huey "Slicks" in the United States Army as a Warrant Officer 1. He sailed to Vietnam with the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) and served a one year tour over there, nine months with the First Cav, the last three months with the 48th Aviation Company.

After an exciting month of chopping stumps and living in a pup tent, doing very little flying, things started to pick up. B, 229th was involved in the Battle of the Ia Drang. Mason and his fellow pilots flew a lot of missions to resupply the grunts and pick up wounded, since at that time Cav Medevacs were not allowed to fly if the LZ (Landing zone) was hot. Mason details a lot of their missions and battles, including Bong Son Valley and Happy Valley in Chickenhawk. He also gives the reader an idea of how to fly the helicopter and what it was like to be a helicopter pilot.

Mason transferred to the 48th Aviation Company (United States) in May 1966, although he called it the 49th in the book. He continued to fly helicopters, including assault missions for the 101st Airborne in Dak To as part of Operation Hawthorne in June 1966. Mason carried out other flying tasks and tells funny stories about life in the 48th including flying drunk and trading for block ice. After his one-year tour of duty, Mason became an instructor pilot at Fort Wolters, Texas. Eventually he was grounded for dizzy spells and diagnosed with combat fatigue resulting from his service in Vietnam. Combat fatigue was later re-named posttraumatic stress disorder.

In 1979, Mason began to write a book about his tour in Vietnam. He named it Chickenhawk, after a conversation he and his friend and fellow helicopter pilot Jerry Towler had had in 1965 while waiting to pick up some GIs in Vietnam.

In 1981, he was arrested for smuggling marijuana on a boat from Colombia. A month later his agent sold Chickenhawk to Viking Penguin on the basis of one third of the book. Mason didn't tell anyone including his agent and his editor until they finished the rest of the book and read the last page.

Chickenhawk was published in 1983, and Christopher Lehmann-Haupt gave it a stunning review in The New York Times. Mason was invited to appear on the The Today Show on a Wednesday and had to show up at Eglin Federal Prison Camp on Friday. Chickenhawk became a hardcover and paperback best-seller. It was given rave reviews all over the country which inspired People magazine to do a story on his troubles under the heading "Trouble."

Mason was released from prison on May 17, 1985. He has subsequently published two novels, Weapon and Solo, as well as a second memoir, Chickenhawk: Back in the World. In 1996, Columbia/Tristar released a film (Solo) based on Mason's first novel, but which used the title of the second.