Military service can shatter or give meaning to lives-it is rarely a
neutral -encounter--and it has resulted in a rich outpouring of personal
testimony from the men and women who have literally placed their lives
on the line. "A 'real' love letter to our military [that] will prove
enlightening, even galvanizing" (Dissent), A People's History of the
U.S. Military tells the captivating narratives of common soldiers,
sampled from over three centuries of letters, diaries, and memoirs as
well as audio recordings, films, and blogs. The often dramatic,
sometimes very raw, and always richly textured first-person accounts
collected in this book cover a wide range of perspectives, from ardent
patriots to disillusioned cynics, barely literate farm boys to urbane
college graduates, scions of founding families to recent immigrants, and
women disguising themselves as men in order to serve their country to
African Americans fighting for their freedom through military service.
Praised as "compact and complete" (Booklist), "an excellent
educational tool" (Publishers Weekly), and "a useful, unsettling,
-bottom-up history of America's wars that emphasizes the soldiers'
mistreatment, suffering, and injustice" (Kirkus Reviews), A People's
History of the U.S. Military has already become a major new touchstone
for our understanding of American military service.