In Quagmire you\'ll find a range of voices--men and women, military and civilian--and a range of perspectives from the homeland, the combat zone, and war\'s aftermath.
He is the author of Gathering Noise from My Life: A Camouflaged Memoir and the editor of When War Becomes Personal: Soldiers\' Accounts from the Civil War to Iraq , among other books..
Air Force Academy, where he edits War, Literature & the Arts: An International Journal of the Humanities .
About author(s): Donald Anderson is a professor of English and writer in residence at the U.
S.
To ignore such reminders imperils ourselves, our communities, and our nation.
As citizens, Pablo Neruda advised, we have an obligation to "come and see the blood in the streets." To ignore what we do in war and what war does to us is to move willfully toward ignorance.
The responses cover approximately fifteen years of the United States\' conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan and demonstrate the aftermath of war and the degreed ripples that extend beyond soldiers to families and friends, lovers, hometowns, even pets.
These Personal responses to war in Iraq and Afghanistan have been selected from War, Literature & the Arts: An International Journal of the Humanities to mark the thirtieth anniversary of its inaugural publication.
In Quagmire you\'ll find a range of voices--men and women, military and civilian--and a range of perspectives from the homeland, the combat zone, and war\'s aftermath