Colby Buzzell
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Colby Buzzell (b. 1976 in California) is an American author, blogger and former soldier with the United States Army.
Buzzell grew up in California and enlisted in the United States Army at the age of 26. Prior to joining the Army he described his life as engaging in a lot of drinking, drug use, dead-end jobs and a minor criminal record. He was very optimistic about his Army service and was determined to follow the Army recruiting slogan of "Be All That You Can Be". He joined the service as an infantryman and spent 2003 in Iraq, assigned to a Stryker Brigade Combat Team. In his book he expresses a great deal of enthusiasm about the benefits of wheels over traditional treaded armor in urban settings.
It was in Iraq that Buzzell began publishing a blog under the title "CBFTW", "Colby Buzzel Fuck This War[1]", as a replacement for his habitual journaling back in the States. The blog[2]gained popularity quickly, because as an anonymous soldier-blogger Buzzell was able to share more lucid experiences than an embedded journalist, and he was also able to share a bit more of the truth than the Army was able to.
Buzzell's blog gained recognition for it's realistic portrayal of gripping first hand accounts of the war in Iraq [3]. This 'milblog' won praise as “an unfiltered, often ferocious expression of his boots-on-the-ground view of the Iraq war" [4]
Colby published a book on his experiences entitled, My War: Killing Time in Iraq combining narrative, blog entries, and emails that evolved from his blog over time. The book received good reviews and has been recommended for public libraries [5].
In 2004, Buzzell was profiled in Esquire magazine's "Best and Brightest" issue and has since contributed regularly. In 2007, Buzzell received the 2007 Lulu Blooker Prize for My War: Killing Time in Iraq.
On 2008, Buzzell was re-called for active duty, and he is about to enter his second tour-of-duty in Iraq. [6]
[edit] References
Blooker award for My War [7]
USA Today story on 'milbloggers' [8]
Re-called to active duty in 2008 [9]