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Vietnam vet reunites with woman he met in 1969 -- thanks to AI and a war memoir
Vietnam vet reunites with woman he met in 1969 -- thanks to AI and a war memoir

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Vietnam vet reunites with woman he met in 1969 -- thanks to AI and a war memoir

Apr. 15—MITCHELL — For more than half a century, Vietnam veteran Jim Anderson held onto a memory — a brief wartime encounter, a father's untold story, and a promise to one day find a book that hadn't yet been written. Now, 56 years after that fleeting afternoon in Sydney, Australia, Anderson's long wait has finally come full circle. In April, Anderson was reunited with Robyn (Bond) Wood, an Australian woman he met in 1969 while on leave from Cu Chi, Vietnam, where he was stationed with the 20th Transportation Company hauling helicopter parts. Their reconnection was made possible through persistence, technology and a book called "Twists of Fate." "It's been one big twist of fate," Anderson said, smiling. In 1969, Anderson chose Australia for his R&R destination. On a return flight to Sydney after visiting Armidale, he struck up a conversation with Wood, then a university student heading home to Melbourne. "After spending the last 10 months in Vietnam, I was not about to pass up an opportunity to visit with a pretty girl," Anderson recalled. They spent a few hours together in Sydney — seeing "Romeo and Juliet," grabbing a meal and talking. Wood told him about her father, Stanley Arthur Bond, a World War II medic who had been captured on Crete and spent four years as a prisoner of war. Anderson, whose uncle had died in the Pacific during the war, was fascinated. But the two parted ways soon after, with no way to stay in touch — just memories and a single black-and-white photo. For decades, Anderson searched for a WWII memoir written by someone named Bond. He had no first name, only fragments: Crete, a POW camp and Madame Chiang Kai-Shek. He regularly checked used bookstores and catalogs but came up empty — until last September. "Thanks to computers and AI, I hit the jackpot," he said. "I entered the right string of words, and there it was." The result was "Twists of Fate," the autobiography of Stanley Arthur Bond, edited by his daughter, Dr. Robyn Wood, and published by Green Hill in August 2023. Anderson ordered a copy and read it — twice. Anderson contacted the publisher, who connected him with Wood. He sent an email with the old photo and a simple note: "I've been waiting for your father's book for 55 years." Wood was skeptical at first. "I was a little bit suspicious of someone saying that they had met me 55 years ago," Wood said. Wood didn't remember the encounter at first, but Anderson's detailed memory, backed by a wartime letter he'd written home (and which his mother had saved), convinced her. "He remembered so much," Wood said. "I had no memory of us. So I was impressed." Anderson still had the ticket stubs from "Romeo and Juliet," now part of a Vietnam collection he's kept over the years. As fate would have it, Wood had already planned a trip to Canada to meet newly discovered relatives. With Anderson's invitation and perfect timing, she made a detour to South Dakota. On April 7, Anderson and his wife, Joan, picked her up in Rapid City. Together, they visited the Badlands, Mount Rushmore and the Corn Palace — where Anderson pointed out a mural of the Sydney Opera House. "I have a picture of the Sydney Opera House taken in April of 1969," Anderson said. "So when I saw it depicted on the Corn Palace, it brought back memories. It gave me even more reason to show Mitchell's version of a world wonder to a visitor from Down Under." Wood didn't begin editing her father's memoirs until she retired in 2015. A former research assistant in geology at Melbourne University and later a viticulturist, she finally had time to dig into her father's writings — a massive collection that spanned his early years, wartime service and post-war life. The project took six to seven years. "I grew up thinking he was born in New Zealand," Wood said. "It wasn't until I started digging that I learned he was actually born in London and spent much of his early life in an orphanage." This wasn't her first editing project — she previously worked on "Elmhurst Bush Nursing Center: 100 Years of Caring," but this one was deeply personal. "It helped me understand who my father really was, not just as a dad, but as a man shaped by war and survival," Wood said. She hopes to one day visit the POW camp where her father was held — now a museum — and walk the same death march route he endured. As for whether the Andersons will ever make it to Australia to visit Wood? "Whether or not I get back down there, I don't know," Anderson said. "When you're 80, it gets tougher to travel." Still, for two people brought together by a twist of fate — and a long-awaited book — the journey has already gone farther than either could've imagined. "Maybe things would have been different if the internet was around back then," Wood said with a smile. "Maybe," Anderson replied. "But I'm just glad we met again — and that I finally got to read the book."

Two people reunited after 56 years in 'Twist of Fate'
Two people reunited after 56 years in 'Twist of Fate'

Yahoo

time13-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Two people reunited after 56 years in 'Twist of Fate'

MITCHELL, S.D. (KELO) — A Vietnam veteran from Mitchell has been reunited with a woman he met all the way back in 1969. The two reconnected after he found a book he had been waiting for her to publish for over five decades. Update: crews control large grassfire in Dewey County Their reunion has been one big twist of fate. About 56 years ago, Jim Anderson was serving in Vietnam but was granted a rest and relaxation trip to Australia. That's where he met Australian native Robyn Wood. 'I persuaded her to spend some time with me. We went to a movie, Romeo and Juliet,' Anderson said. During their time together, Wood mentioned that her father, Stanley Bond, was writing a memoir of his time as a prisoner of war in World War II. Bond was a medic in the New Zealand Army before being captured by the Germans. The story piqued Anderson's curiosity because he's always had an interest in World War II. His uncle was killed while serving in the war. Eventually, Anderson and Wood went their separate ways, but Anderson spent over 50 years waiting for the memoir to be published. 'I would guess that I looked, when the computers got a little better, I had a total of, 15-20 times I probably looked for this book over this period of time,' Anderson said. 'It wasn't until I retired that I was in a position to be able to spend some time putting the book together,' Wood said. Wood estimates it took her six to seven years to edit the book called Twists of Fate. The book covers her father's life before, during and after the war and came out in August of last year. Finally, Anderson had what he was looking for. 'I had hit the jackpot,' Anderson said. Then, Anderson reached out to Wood. 'In an email I sent to her, I said I think it'd be fun to compare life stories over this past 56 years,' Anderson said. 'Well, at first, I was a little bit suspicious of someone saying that they had met me 55 years ago and waiting for the publication of a book, but then, when Jim sent me the photo of the two of us in Sydney, I was thrilled,' Wood said. Anderson and his wife, Joan, invited Wood to South Dakota. The trio has visited the Badlands, Mount Rushmore and the Corn Palace, among other places. It's been an experience that Wood won't soon forget. 'It's meant a lot to me to feel that someone has really appreciated my father's story but also just two lovely people whose company I've really enjoyed,' Wood said. You can find details about Wood's book Twists of Fate here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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