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Why Soldiers Miss War

The Journey Home

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“The stories . . . are top-notch and engaging as soldiers and veterans grapple with big questions while seeking meaning in life and coping with war and PTSD.” —Booklist
 
Ask combat veterans to name the worst experience of their lives, and they’ll probably tell you it was war. But ask them to choose the best experience, and they’ll usually say it was war, too.
 
For those who haven’t served in combat, this is nearly impossible to understand. The spectrum of emotions experienced by a combat veteran is far wider than that experienced in civilian life, and for that reason it can be hard for a veteran to re-assimilate.
 
What is it about war that soldiers miss? This is a question every civilian should try to understand. Weaving together a wide range of stories, from the flight deck of a U.S. aircraft carrier off Syria to climbing a forbidden Himalayan pass into Tibet, this moving, insightful book explains one of the most everlasting human pursuits—war. But it is also about coming home and confronting another kind of struggle, which we all share—the search for happiness.
 
In this collection, Nolan Peterson writes of war from the perspective of both combatant and witness, taking us from missions over Afghanistan as an Air Force special ops pilot to the frontlines against ISIS in Iraq, and to trench and tank battles in Ukraine. Interweaving his reports with a narrative of his own transformation from combat pilot to war journalist, he explores a timeless paradox: Why does coming home from war feel like such a disappointment?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 29, 2019
      Peterson’s slim, sometimes confusing memoir consists of a series of essays about his life as an Air Force combat pilot and war correspondent, structured superficially around the age-old question of why going to war holds such appeal despite its horrors. He recounts that, as a boy in Sarasota, Fla., he dreamed of a life of adventure; when he was 16 he earned his pilot’s license and travelled alone to the mountains of Nepal. He entered the Air Force Academy in 2000; on Christmas Eve 2009, he flew his first combat mission in Afghanistan. Two years later, he left the military to pursue new adventures. After traveling in the Himalayas, he went to graduate school in journalism and decided that a career in “conflict journalism” would supply the excitement he still longed for. He also found love with Lilly, a Ukrainian woman whom he married. All the questions about his attraction to war are dismissed in favor of love: “In the end, that’s what I need more than war.” The essays skip around in time, which can make it difficult to keep track of events, and the philosophical questions can seem more like occasionally deployed literary devices than objects of sustained contemplation. This will appeal more to readers looking for tales of world travel and war zones than those looking for a reflection on the military life.

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2019
      In his first book, Peterson?a thrill-seeking mountaineer, air force pilot, war correspondent, and nomadic combat veteran?confronts a major paradox. Well-written and compelling, his inquiry doesn't attempt a scientific analysis, relying, instead, on the author's own experiences and interviews with soldiers in conflicts around the world, making this a personal and subjective approach to a sensitive subject. The stories Peterson shares are top-notch and engaging as soldiers and veterans grapple with big questions while seeking meaning in life and coping with war and PTSD. Peterson mainly addresses the vast majority of Americans who have not served in the armed forces, attempting to narrow the now nearly perilous divide he sees between the military and civilian worlds, and offering advice to the latter about how to interact with the former. Why Soldiers Miss War is an excellent addition to the growing body of literature on the effects of combat on a nation in which, even though it has spent the twenty-first century at war, most of the population knows little about the conflicts and the soldiers involved.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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