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willschick85's review
3.0
I came to this book looking for stories about war. As a writer who spent over a decade in the military, I devour books like this, and I am also working on a project of my own. About half-way through reading this, I found myself asking whether the author had ever been in the military. Something about some of these stories seemed to be far too distant and second-hand to be authentic. I google’d and learned that contrary to my initial thought, she had never been in.
It was at this point that I read the book with much more interest. I think Schultz does a remarkable job with capturing the military experience—some of these stories I found to be incredible while others I honestly had a hard time getting through. This is biund to happen in any project, but I must say that there were a few parts of this collection where I felt the writing really did stumble upon the “truth”
For anyone looking for a short easy collection of stories to read, I think this is a book definitely worthy of a read—and personally, I found it much better than Phil Klay’s Redeployment—
It was at this point that I read the book with much more interest. I think Schultz does a remarkable job with capturing the military experience—some of these stories I found to be incredible while others I honestly had a hard time getting through. This is biund to happen in any project, but I must say that there were a few parts of this collection where I felt the writing really did stumble upon the “truth”
For anyone looking for a short easy collection of stories to read, I think this is a book definitely worthy of a read—and personally, I found it much better than Phil Klay’s Redeployment—
dragoncodes's review
5.0
It's an excellent book that brings a very different and personal view of the war, instead of the detached view we see threw the major news venues. Excellent!
unabridgedchick's review
4.0
This slender collection of short stories and 'flash' fiction packs a punch; I sat down on a Sunday morning with a little bit of dread, I admit, nervous about how grim the stories would be and how the author -- who has no military experience -- would handle the topic. Despite my wildly liberal political leanings, I'm from a military family and the US military is a complicated animal for me. I wasn't interested in a wholly patriotic wash nor aggressive criticisms. I was surprised to find I'd finished this book just as my wife came in for her first cup of coffee -- and that I really liked it. (My experience isn't dissimilar to that of Vestal Review, and we both had the same thoughts upon finishing.)
Comprised of thirty-one short stories and flash fiction (shorts in 150 words), the stories share the points of view of active duty US soldiers, families in Iraq and Afghanistan affected by the conflict, military spouses and loved ones, the damaged and the healing.
While the opening piece felt a little too clever for me -- a soldier in Afghanistan is bitter about Americans watching Hollywood action flicks at the mall -- the rest of the collection wasn't self-conscious or smugly ironic. Sad, a little crude, bittersweet, frightening, and at moments, even happy, these stories run a range of emotions rather beautifully.
Schultz's writing is clear and to the point, no wasted words or flighty, aloof sentiments. While Schultz isn't graphic in articulating the violence these soldiers and survivors see, it's apparent, tempered with resilience and the grim determination to survive.
Some of my favorite pieces include 'The Quiet Kind', about a husband and father's 'quiet' PTSD and the frigid barriers between him and those at home; 'Deuce Out', in which the younger teenaged sister of a man serving in Afghanistan decides to emulate her beloved older brother; 'KIA', the sparse and heartbreaking outline of a man killed in action; 'Checkpoint', about the devastating impact of misunderstanding cultural gestures; and 'Aaseya & Rahim', about an Afghan couple in an arranged marriage who find themselves in love with each other as they both work hard to survive.
A surprising but satisfying collection, those who are interested in stories of the military and those impacted by war will likely enjoy these pieces. Schultz is another writer now on my 'to watch for' list.
Comprised of thirty-one short stories and flash fiction (shorts in 150 words), the stories share the points of view of active duty US soldiers, families in Iraq and Afghanistan affected by the conflict, military spouses and loved ones, the damaged and the healing.
While the opening piece felt a little too clever for me -- a soldier in Afghanistan is bitter about Americans watching Hollywood action flicks at the mall -- the rest of the collection wasn't self-conscious or smugly ironic. Sad, a little crude, bittersweet, frightening, and at moments, even happy, these stories run a range of emotions rather beautifully.
Schultz's writing is clear and to the point, no wasted words or flighty, aloof sentiments. While Schultz isn't graphic in articulating the violence these soldiers and survivors see, it's apparent, tempered with resilience and the grim determination to survive.
Some of my favorite pieces include 'The Quiet Kind', about a husband and father's 'quiet' PTSD and the frigid barriers between him and those at home; 'Deuce Out', in which the younger teenaged sister of a man serving in Afghanistan decides to emulate her beloved older brother; 'KIA', the sparse and heartbreaking outline of a man killed in action; 'Checkpoint', about the devastating impact of misunderstanding cultural gestures; and 'Aaseya & Rahim', about an Afghan couple in an arranged marriage who find themselves in love with each other as they both work hard to survive.
A surprising but satisfying collection, those who are interested in stories of the military and those impacted by war will likely enjoy these pieces. Schultz is another writer now on my 'to watch for' list.
bwolfe718's review
5.0
Please see my full review at my blog dedicated to literary fiction by women authors:
http://readherlikeanopenbook.wordpress.com/2014/01/20/flashes-of-war-provides-all-encompassing-insight-into-war/
http://readherlikeanopenbook.wordpress.com/2014/01/20/flashes-of-war-provides-all-encompassing-insight-into-war/
wilsonthomasjoseph's review
A book that explores well the circumstances of war from many angles.
The stories float from gritty brutal truth to the philosophical underparts showing through the writing flow. Regardless, definitely good writing.
The stories float from gritty brutal truth to the philosophical underparts showing through the writing flow. Regardless, definitely good writing.