When the War Came Home: The Inside Story of Reservists and the Families Left Behind

When the War Came Home: The Inside Story of Reservists and the Families Left Behind

by StacyBannerman (Author)

Synopsis

Stacy Bannerman's husband, Lorin was a 43-year-old Sergeant First Class in the reserve army who had never thought he'd be called upon to wage war, but in October 2003 he was called to active duty as an Infantry Mortar Platoon Sergeant. He had completed his duty and commitment to the U.S. Army as of 22 June, 2004, but due to President Bush's Stop Loss order, he was on the war's front-lines until at least April 2005. Stacy Bannerman has a unique vantage point for writing When The War Came Home . On the one hand, she is like the many thousands of women left behind while their reservist husbands and partners are sent to fight in Iraq - for as ill-equipped as their husbands are to wage war, the families left behind are often even less equipped to cope. On the other hand, Stacy Bannerman has the singular viewpoint of being a high-profile career peace activist, who ultimately finds herself at odds with her husband fighting on the front lines of Iraq in one of the most dangerous assignments in the Army. Bannerman describes the countdown to her husband's deployment, and documents her ongoing struggle to reconcile her anti-war sentiments with the need to support and honor her husband for the choice he made and for the risks he's taking for his country.

$54.67

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Published: 01 Jun 2006

ISBN 10: 0826417957
ISBN 13: 9780826417954

Media Reviews
Bannerman is a career peace and human rights activist, whose husband, Lorin, a sergeant in the National Guard, was called up to serve in Iraq. She uses the challenges the couple faced in reconciling his war work with her peace work as a focal point of When the War Came Home ... she makes important points, such as showing that the most passionate activism against war is not on college campuses but in the household of those with the most at stake, the primarily blue-collar military families. Bannerman also effectively conveys the isolation and lack of government support particular two National Guard families who operate on the military's second tier. What comes through loud and clear... is the enormous, and underreported, toll this war has taken on military families at home. - Emily Yellin, The Washington Post, May 3, 2006
Author Bio
Stacy Bannerman, lives in Seattle. She is a high-profile career peace activist as well as a founder/executive director of Reconciliation Works in Washington.