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Whether you're for or against the war in Iraq, this is essential reading.
A Year on the Ground in Iraq
HarperCollins
October 2005
336 pages ISBN: 0060843667 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction Memoir
This is not your father's war
This is Iraq, where a soldier's first duty is reinforcing
his Humvee with sheet metal and sand bags. Or, in the
absence of plumbing, burning barrels of human waste. Where
any dead dog on the side of the road might be concealing an
insurgent's bomb and anyone could be the enemy. At age 17, Jason Christopher Hartley joined the Army
National Guard. Thirteen years later, he is called to
active duty, to serve in Iraq. Sent to a town called Ad
Dujayl, made notorious by Saddam Hussein's 1982 massacre,
Hartley is thrust into the center of America’s war against
terrorism. This is his story. "If you are distrustful of the media and want to know
exactly what's going on in Iraq, you'll have to pray for
divine enlightenment, because only god knows what the hell
is going on over here. However, if you want to know how it
feels to be a soldier in Iraq, to hear something honest and
raw, that I can help you with." Sometimes profane, often poignant, and always nakedly
candid, Just Another Soldier takes the reader past the
images seen on CNN and the nightly news, into the day to
day reality of life on the ground as an infantryman,
attached to the 1st Division, in the first war of the 21st
century. From the adrenaline rush of storming a suspected
insurgent's house, to the sheer boredom of down time on the
base, to the horror of dead civilians, Hartley examines his
role as a man, as a soldier and as an American on foreign
soil. His quest to discover the balance between his
compassionate side and his baser instincts, results in a
searing portrait of today’s Army and a remarkable personal
narrative written in a fresh and exciting new voice. Just
Another Soldier is more than a war story; it delivers an
intimate look at a generation of young men and women on the
front lines of American policy.
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