Reviews
Compellingly journalistic.
A triumph.
This challenging book should be read by all of those with an interest in military psychiatry and what happens to individuals when subjected to the intense stress of combat.
This work should be required reading for every official in Washington and every high-school student... A brilliant book that concisely lays out the unrelenting madness of war.
An excellent, comprehensive examination of war and killing. It is a well-written and concise work that has considerable relevance for all clinicians providing treatment to those experiencing the effects of trauma... This book represents a compelling and thoughtful examination of the horrors of war and man's inhumanity to man.
In a review, I cannot do justice to the book's philosophically and psychologically complex, sometimes tortured, but invariably stimulating arguments.
Powerful and painful... On one level it is about psychiatrically impaired Vietnam veterans; at another level it is about fundamental relationships, how they form, what they depend on, and how they can be perverted.
Moving... challenging both in its topics and its insights.
The author's clinical insight is tempered both by the compassion of belonging to the same generation as the men who sought his healing and his own military experience.
Ted Nadelson has mapped the complex terrain of men and war in this searing and eloquent book. I can't imagine a better time in our history for this stunning exploration of what war means to men—and does to men.
Dr. Theodore Nadelson's book on the experience of killing in warfare and combat is the most significant, valuable, and original contribution to this extremely important subject that I have ever read. The book is not only, in my opinion, intellectually brilliant—some of its insights virtually take one's breath away—but also exceptionally moving and poignant.
Book Details
Note to the Reader
Preface
Part I: Boys Become Soldiers
1. Boys: Playing at War
2. Brothers and Comrades
Part II: Killing and Killers
3. Killing: Getting the Job Done
4. Killers: Bred in the Bone
Part III
Note to the Reader
Preface
Part I: Boys Become Soldiers
1. Boys: Playing at War
2. Brothers and Comrades
Part II: Killing and Killers
3. Killing: Getting the Job Done
4. Killers: Bred in the Bone
Part III: The Trauma of War
5. Counterforce: Facing Terror
6. Damage: War's Awful Aftermath
7. Myths and Perceptions
8. The Wonder of War
9. Sex and the Soldier
Part IV: The Future of War
10. Women and War
Epilogue
Notes
References
Index