Synopses & Reviews
Here are stunningly honest first-hand accounts and personal reflections by U.S. troops and their families. To encourage U.S. troops and their families to record what they saw, heard, and felt during combat in Afghanistan and Iraq, the National Endowment for the Arts organized a series of writing workshops in the summer of 2004 led by prominent authors. The result is this extraordinary volume of never-before-published letters, poems, journals, memoirs, and e-mails, first-hand accounts from the men and women directly involved in battle and the reflections of their families back home. As featured on the cover of theNew Yorker and in various print and televised news programs, this is not only a rich historical document that will preserve the stories and reflections of American troops in the war on error but also an important addition to the long tradition of war literature at a crucial moment in American history.
Synopsis
Stunningly honest eyewitness accounts and personal reflections by U.S. troops and their families
Synopsis
In the summer of 2004, the National Endowment for the Arts organized a series of writing workshops led by prominent authors to encourage US troops and their families to record their experiences and reflections on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The result is this extraordinary volume of first-hand letters, poems, journals, memoirs, and e-mails from the men and women directly involved in battle and their families back home. This uniquely personal addition to the long tradition of war literature covers the entire arc of a soldier's journey, from those first experiences of combat, encounters with Iraqis and Afghans, and the humor and boredom of the daily grind, to the physical and emotional toll of battle, the struggle of loved ones back home to carry on, and finally the return and integration back into American life.