Operation Homecoming (book)
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In 2004, bestselling authors traveled to U.S. military bases all over the world, looking for literary talent on behalf of the National Endowment for the Arts. These authors, including Tom Clancy and Jeff Shaara, held 50 on-base workshops for American troops and their families, inspiring them to write about their experiences since 9/11. The troops and their families responded with more than 10,000 pages of submissions.[1]
Select short stories, essays, journal entries, poems, e-mails and photographs were collected into an anthology called Operation Homecoming: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Home Front, in the Words of U.S. Troops and Their Families, published by Random House.
The NEA initiative, funded by The Boeing Company, is the first book of its kind, giving a rare voice to U.S. troops and their families - unfiltered and firsthand accounts of what it's like to serve during wartime.
Through Operation Homecoming, these writers take us on convoys and patrols; to hospitals, flight decks, tarmacs and tents; into their homes as they wait for their loved ones to return. With personal details and honest language, they show us the fear and rushing of heading into combat, the humor and boredom of daily life on the front lines, their relationships with Iraqis and Afghans, happy reunions at home, and mourning those who made the ultimate sacrifice.
A panel of celebrated authors, guided by historian Andrew Carroll, chose the 89 contributors who were published in Operation Homecoming. No one's story was excluded based on point of view; the book is largely apolitical and delivers an insider's look at what it means to be at war.
Before becoming editor of Operation Homecoming, Carroll had edited several bestselling and critically acclaimed books, and founded The Legacy Project. Random House launched Operation Homecoming on September 12, 2006 at the Library of Congress. Proceeds from the anthology will bring arts and cultural programming to U.S. military communities.
[edit] Developments
- Excerpts of Operation Homecoming were featured in the June 12, 2006 issue of The New Yorker.
- Operation Homecoming also got a positive review in the September 10, 2006 edition of The Washington Post, noting that "after so much journalism, history, punditry and blogviating, much of what these unknown amateur scribes -- troops in Afghanistan and Iraq, and members of their families -- have to say about the personal experience of war is fresh and intimate..."[2]
- ABC News featured the book in an October 8, 2006 broadcast called “The Pain of War in Black and White.”
- A documentary based on the book, titled Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience, will debut on PBS on April 16, 2007.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Operation Homecoming
- Andrew Carroll's Legacy Project, preserving war letters