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Doonesbury.com's The Sandbox
edited by
David Stanford
ISBN #
978-0-7407-6945-0
Andrew
McMeel Publishing, 2007, $ 16.95
www.andrewsmcmeel.com
RECIPIENT
OF THE 2008 MWSA Gold Medal for Anthologies
Who are
these Marines and Soldiers whose courage and tenacity is so
glorified and politicized by those who never served ?
Editor
David Stanford brings us the daily stories of those fighting
in Iraq and Afghanistan, and in their own blunt words. An
Gary Trudeau-inspired addition to his 11-year old
Doonesbury.com website, Trudeau and Stanford invited the
warriors overseas to write back so the folks back on the
homefront could stay informed about the war. They weren't
looking for strategy and tactics, but rather the daily
routine - ranging from boring to mundane to kinetic - that
the troops experienced.
And write
they did, as "mil-blogging" increased in popularity, the
writing skills of a few of the blogging Marines and Soldiers
brought the wars back home in a visceral fashion that often
leaves the reader with damp eyes. No slick writing here, but
rather just the honest words of your son and daughters and
husbands at war.
1st Sgt
Troy Steward, New York Guard, writes of his time in
Afghanistan as part of an Embedded Training Team (ETT) with
an Afghan National Army Unit. Sgt Roy Batty, stationed in
Baghdad, writes of the boredom associated with living on a
FOB and then later segues into problems with an Iraqi Police
unit that shot and killed an old man. "They are our
buddies," he writes,"our comrades in arms with whom we are
supposed to bring Jeffersonian democracy and security to
this wonderful country..." . 1st Lt Stefan laments the death
of a fellow officer, 2nd Lt Scott Lundell, with whom he
attended OCS. "Rest in peace,"Stefan grieves on his
keyboard,"...a brother in arms who is loved and missede. The
debt will not go unpaid..."
Stanford
has sifted through the hundreds of articles posted on the
more popular milblogs such as bouhammer.com,
sackiniraq.blogspot.com. and traversa.typepad.com, and
posted a few of the best. "The Sandbox" has articles from
men and women, officers and enlisted men, and warriors,
chaplains, and corpsmen. These are unforgiving wars where
the combat zones start at the border, and Stanford lets
those doing the fighting talk about how it affects them. In
an environment where the media is criticised for playing
politics by wanting to show photos of coffins being returned
to the United States, one can instead read SPC J.R.
Salzman's (jrsalzman.com.weblog) blunt description of having
his arm blown off "...the tast of blood in my mouth,
realizing that the bottom half of my arm was missing with
nothing left but a couple of fingers and part of my hand
hanging off by some skin and tendons and realizing how much
pain I was in."
The value
of "The Sandbox" is that it lets the reader forget the petty
politics of the last few years and instead get to know
something about the Marines and Soldiers who are doing the
fighting and dying. Republicans - Democrats are unimportant
when one reads 1st Sgt Stewards reports from Afghanistan, or
SPC's Salzman writing about how "the last time I saw my
wedding ring was when it was being snipped off with a pair
of bolt cutters at a hospital in the Green Zone in Baghdad."
Thank you, Gentlemen, for what you are doing, and thank you
for sharing it with us; "The Sandbox" should be read by
every American.
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