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When War Becomes Personal: Soldiers' Accounts from the Civil War to Iraq Summary:By Donald Anderson
Donald Anderson, a former U.S. Air Force officer, has compiled a haunting anthology of personal essays and short memoirs that span more than 100 years of warfare. Alvord White Clements—himself a veteran of the Second World War—introduces his grandfather Isaac N. Clements’s Civil War memoir; the novelist Paul West writes of his father, a British veteran of World War I, as well as of his own boyhood recollections of the London Blitz. John Wolfe details the life-changing and life-threatening injuries he sustained in Vietnam and the hallucinations he experienced afterward. Second Gulf War veteran Jason Armagost traces his journey to Iraq through the history of literature and the books he brought with him to the war zone.
The thirteen essays in When War Becomes Personal tell the enduring truths of battle, stripping away much of the romance, myth, and fantasy. Soldiers more than anyone know what they are capable of destroying; when they write about war, they are trying to preserve the world. Summary: Thoughtful and illuminating Rating: 5 Amidst the storm of soundbites and cliches that we call modern living, voices that speak thoughtfully and from personal experience are rare and precious. Read this book if you would like to understand a little about what it means to go to war, if you would like an antidote to the propaganda and nonsense normally broadcast on the subject. NEWER EBOOKSSponsored LinksWhen War Becomes Personal: Soldiers' Accounts from the Civil War to Iraq Keywordspersonal veteran anderson essays donald soldiers iraq civil stripping battle truths fantasy capable enduring myth romance literature armagost jason gulf traces donald anderson warfare alvord grandfather isaac personal essays british veteran haunting anthology soldiers accounts description donald personal soldiers |
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