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Wounded Warriors: Those for Whom the War Never Ends
Author: Mike Sager
Genre: Non-fiction
Publisher: Da Capo
Reviewed by: Bill McDonald – Founder
and past President of the MWSA
The MWSA”s Founder’s Award
Winner for 2008!

When I got my hands on a copy of author
Mike Sager’s book “Wounded Warriors: Those for Whom
the War Never Ends” I was not expecting powerful
stories of such diversity. The treatment he gives the book
and how he writes about such seemly different people somehow
all perfectly fit into the author’s theme that “In one
way or another, every one of us is a wounded warrior. All of
us are engaged in wars, large and small, that may last
forever.”
Being a Vietnam veteran and a recipient
of a Purple Heart for wounds received in combat, I
was somewhat skeptical and a little offended by Mike Sager’s
comparisons between actual wounded soldiers and people like
Kobe Bryant, Al Sharpton or Marlon Brando. So, I began
reading his book looking to find fault with his metaphorical
thread of comparisons. However, I found myself totally
engrossed in how he tied it all together emotionally and
even spiritually at some base invisible level.
Sager starts right off with huge
emotional chapter dealing with wounded veterans from our
present day wars in the Middle East. He compassionately, and
without personal prejudices, manages to gently and
psychologically dissect what he sees and senses. He brings
his points of view into the story of these men without
showing anything more then their own behaviors and words.
The raw pains and the emotions are all there. It is a
powerful tale of a group of marines baring their souls to
the author on a military base in a special unit set aside
for wounded warriors. For some people this chapter will open
their eyes and their hearts to what these men are going
through. If this chapter does not move you then nothing
will.
I found my own personal interest
peaking when Sager profiles a group of old Vietnam veterans
living in Thailand. It seems that for these men the wars
within have never really emotionally ended. They live out
their lives as expatriates; away from home. Between the
booze, the freewheeling sex, and macho encounters with
fellow veterans and others, the author picks up on the
loneliness and sadness that haunts these men still. These
men are in many ways damaged goods. Their souls are still in
pain and at war.
I found the stories about Al Sharpton
and other non-combatants to be a huge surprise. The author
enables the reader to see through all the public hype about
these men. He gives us portraits of real human beings with
flesh and blood emotional issues; and yes, with their own
inner wars!
This book may add some new insights to
your thinking, but the bottom-line is that it is
entertaining and fascinating. It draws the reader into these
lives; at the end of the book, you will find yourself
changed in some way. Call it empathy, or just a
compassionate response to have seen and become aware of
another man’s pain and suffering; but you will remember
these men that you read about long after putting this book
to rest.
I fully recommend this book. I give it
the Military Writer’s Society of America’s highest
book rating of FIVE STARS. I am also proud to honor
it with this year’s MWSA’s Founder’s Award for 2008!
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