Battles Without End‘Thank You for Your Service,’ by David Finkel
In his deeply affecting 2009 book, The Good Soldiers, David Finkel gave us a harrowing and unnervingly intimate picture of the Iraq war as seen by members of an Army battalion sent to Baghdad during the surge in 2007. This was not Washingtons macro war, but the micro war on the ground, made up of specific acts of bravery and tragedy experienced by the soldiers of Battalion 2-16 as they patrolled streets riddled with sniper fire and improvised explosive devices that would claim the lives and limbs of their comrades.
Some of that books most powerful passages dealt with the war after the war the efforts of the soldiers to come to terms with their injuries and ineradicable memories, and to try to readjust to ordinary life back home in the States. Mr. Finkels new book, Thank You for Your Service, amplifies that story, tracking the lives of some of the same soldiers after their deployments have ended. They and their families attempt to recover some facsimile of normalcy or, in the words of one veterans wife, come up with reasonable expectations of what can be, given their lingering physical and psychological wounds.
This is a heartbreaking book powered by the candor with which these veterans and their families have told their stories, the intimate access they have given Mr. Finkel (an editor and writer for The Washington Post) into their daily lives, and their own eloquence in speaking about their experiences. The book leaves the reader wondering why the Veterans Affairs Department cannot provide better, more accessible care for wounded warriors. And why soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder which Mr. Finkel says studies show afflicts 20 to 30 percent of the two million Americans who have served in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan must often wade through so much paperwork and bureaucracy to obtain meaningful treatment.
The central story line in Thank You for Your Service belongs to a soldier named Adam Schumann (whom we first met in The Good Soldiers) leaving his third deployment in Iraq in a mental health evacuation. Hed gone there, a gung-ho guy, thinking he had a front seat to the greatest movie Ive ever seen in my life, and remembered thinking once that getting shot at in a firefight was the sexiest feeling there is.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/01/books/thank-you-for-your-service-by-david-finkel.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20131001