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M*A*S*H: A Novel About Three Army Doctors, the original novel that inspired the M*A*S*H movie and TV series, was written by Richard Hooker, himself a former military surgeon, and was about a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in South Korean during the Korean War. It was originally published in 1968, and several sequels followed after the success of the TV series. William E. Butterworth] (W.E.B. Griffin) is credited as co-author on most of the sequels, but may have actually ghostwritten them.

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  • M*A*S*H (novels)
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  • M*A*S*H: A Novel About Three Army Doctors, the original novel that inspired the M*A*S*H movie and TV series, was written by Richard Hooker, himself a former military surgeon, and was about a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in South Korean during the Korean War. It was originally published in 1968, and several sequels followed after the success of the TV series. William E. Butterworth] (W.E.B. Griffin) is credited as co-author on most of the sequels, but may have actually ghostwritten them.
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  • Print , 224 pp
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  • MASH (film) and M*A*S*H TV seriss
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  • Releaeed in:
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  • Media type/Pages
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  • Connected to:
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  • United States
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  • Pocket Books
  • ISBN 978-0688149550
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  • Written by:
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  • War,Comedy/Drama novel
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  • Country
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  • Publisher/ISBN
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  • Genre
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  • English
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  • 1968(xsd:integer)
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Box Title
  • MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors
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  • Book cover
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  • M*A*S*H: A Novel About Three Army Doctors, the original novel that inspired the M*A*S*H movie and TV series, was written by Richard Hooker, himself a former military surgeon, and was about a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in South Korean during the Korean War. It was originally published in 1968, and several sequels followed after the success of the TV series. William E. Butterworth] (W.E.B. Griffin) is credited as co-author on most of the sequels, but may have actually ghostwritten them. Beginning with M*A*S*H Goes to Paris, all the later novels (except for M*A*S*H Mania) largely left the original characters behind to focus on extraneous characters, mostly caricatures of public figures from the 1970s: for instance, operatic tenor Luciano Pavarotti is parodied in the form of a singer named "Korsky-Rimsakov", and news anchor Dan Rather becomes the egotistical "Don Rhotten".
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