After graduating from the University of Michigan, Joann Puffer Kotcher was assigned to Korea and Vietnam as an American Red Cross volunteer from 1965 to 1967, and was one of the first women allowed in a combat zone. She is featured in the film documentary Our Vietnam Generation (2011). Kotcher lives with her husband in Rochester Hills, Michigan.
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Donut Dolly is an engaging and useful account of an almost totally ignored facet of the Vietnam War. Kotcher and her colleagues attempted to make life more bearable for the soldiers and airmen engaged in the war, and along the way her insights are fascinating."" - G. L. Seligmann, co-editor of The Sweep of American History ""Memoirs about women's experiences in the Vietnam War are hard to come by and outnumbered by books filled with men's combat experiences. Women's experiences reveal an entirely different dimension of the war. The day to day interactions that Kotcher had with servicemen certainly succeeded in warming their hearts and reminding them what they were fighting for."" - Meghan K. Winchell, author of Good Girls, Good Food, Good Fun ""One day while guarding Highway 13, we had the rare pleasure of your ladies visiting us. I couldn't believe that you would come to such a terrible place. You were a treat for us to see. We wanted to go home so bad. To see you was a blessing. You may never know how many lives you touched by coming to visit us."" - Gary W. Dyer, Sergeant, C 1/28, 1st Infantry Division, Quan Loi, 1967-68