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"Beyond the Battlefield: The War Goes on for the Severely Wounded" By David Wood

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First Posted: 12/19/2011 7:22 am Updated: 12/20/2011 4:23 pm

In March 2011, The Huffington Post commissioned its veteran war correspondent, David Wood, to document the struggles of severely wounded veterans, their families, and the medics, surgeons, nurses, psychologists and researchers dedicated to their healing. Wood spent nine months in their world.

The result is our third e-book, "Beyond the Battlefield," an intimate portrait of the soldiers and Marines who volunteered for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and what happened to them after bomb blasts and bullets changed them forever. First published as a 10-part series, this e-book is an expanded version, including a foreword and several new chapters, as well as some of the most poignant photography and revelatory graphics from the original series.

Wood, who has covered wars in Africa, Central America and the Middle East, has made nine reporting trips to Iraq and Afghanistan, where he has accompanied soldiers and Marines on numerous combat operations. A former correspondent for Time Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Newhouse News Service and the Baltimore Sun, he was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for national reporting.

As Wood's work revealed, one of the enduring legacies of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are the young Americans who have come home severely, catastrophically wounded. They come home not to parades and honor guards and flags, but with terribly burned faces, amputated limbs, traumatic brain injury and other psychological wounds. And once home, veterans and their loved ones are often left alone to deal with years of recovery and the lingering effects of those injuries. And yet that is the good news, Wood said. A decade ago most of them would have died on the battlefield. They are now being saved, thanks to fast-paced improvements in military trauma medicine. Yet the long-term quality of life for them is uncertain, and the costs of lifetime care can be staggering. There are more than 16,000 of them, and while many Americans are eager to know them and to offer help where it's needed, they are largely without voice, invisible and unknown to most of us.

"Beyond the Battlefield" changes that.


Read an excerpt >



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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Wood has been a journalist since 1970, including stints as a staff correspondent successively for Time Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Newhouse News Service and The Baltimore Sun.

A birthright Quaker and former conscientious objector, he has covered war and conflict in dispatches from three dozen countries across Africa and in Central America, the Balkans, Asia and the Middle East. He has embedded with deployed U.S. forces many times, in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Iraq and Afghanistan. He has flown on B-52 and B-1 bombers, slogged through Army Ranger School, accompanied Rangers on night airborne maneuvers and Marines on amphibious and air assault operations, flown off aircraft carriers and sailed on battleships, cruisers, minesweepers and amphibs, and has submerged aboard attack and strategic missile submarines. He has been scared much of his professional life.

In an earlier book, A Sense of Values (1994), Wood gives an account of a year he spent embedded with the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit and the 1st Battalion, 2nd Marines. He is a Pulitzer Prize finalist in national reporting among other awards.

Raised as a pacifist, Wood completed two years of civilian service in 1968 as a conscientious objector. He has three grown children and two stepchildren and lives with his wife outside Washington D.C. where he bicycles for sport and climbs high mountains when possible.

This book was created with BookBrewer.


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In March 2011, The Huffington Post commissioned its veteran war correspondent, David Wood, to document the struggles of severely wounded veterans, their families, and the medics, surgeons, nurses,...
In March 2011, The Huffington Post commissioned its veteran war correspondent, David Wood, to document the struggles of severely wounded veterans, their families, and the medics, surgeons, nurses,...
Filed by Beth Davidz  | 
 
 
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07:55 PM on 01/30/2012
جوان محترم همیشه کوشش کنید والدین تان را احترام کنید
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GeneEUss
r'U.Think'n.What.I'm.Think'n?
07:47 PM on 03/06/2012
Dear young people always try to respect your parents
01:41 AM on 01/22/2012
My Dog is Bigger than your Dog.
12:12 PM on 01/06/2012
I wrote my Masters thesis on Vietnam Veterans. I spent 6 months at the Albuquerque VA working with the veterans. My dad is a Korean war veteran. Remember the Forgotten war? Troops are still there all these years after the conflict. I remember one veteran who was in "search and destroy". He came down periodically from living in the Sandia mountains to be re-evaluated to receive his medication. The philosophy in 1978 was to stabilize the veterans through medication and send them back out. This veteran was afraid to be around people for fear of what he might do to others. In art therapy, he portrayed himself as a single man walking in the desert sunset. The US Government placed a hiring freeze and cut the budget therefore, after graduation I was never hired to work and help vets. I have never forgotten all the men I met during my internship. GOD BLESS VETERANS. They are special people and deserve proper medical care. This DU stuff is bad news (in my opinion) for the more recent veterans.
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ttsgw
Atheist and secular humanist
03:36 PM on 12/23/2011
Wounded? Bad luck. These guys have made their part to increase the wealth of the military industry, its executives and owners, and their fate is so totally uninteresting for them.
09:19 AM on 12/20/2011
I am glad to see there was at least a mention of WWII combat - a grandson and grandfather could relate to the aftermath of war. As the daughter of a decorated WWII paratrooper, who was portrayed in the movie The Longest Day, and has been rightly hailed as a hero, my recent book, The Hidden Legacy of World War II, tells the rest of the story - after the homecoming. And how mythologizing WWII blinds so many to the facts - that almost half of medical discharges during that waw were for psychiatric reasons, that PTSD was not an official diagnosis until 1980, that men like my dad who tried to get VA were denied, denied, denied (50 years until he got full benefits - first attempt 1946) and that lobotomies were performed at VA hospitals in the postwar years on vets with psychological problems.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
10:52 PM on 12/20/2011
Good for you Carol! My dad landed in North Africa in 1942 and was in the second wave at Normandy on D-Day. He received a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star with V for Valor during the Battle of the Bulge. He never, not once, shared his experiences with me or my mother. If we asked him about it, he acted like he couldn't hear us. He often had nightmares, but refused to admit to them even though he sometimes woke everyone in the house when he moaned and shouted in his sleep. He died in 1997 and never once admitted to any lingering memories of the war.
12:31 AM on 12/20/2011
No where in this article did it mention Pfc Drew and the photographer !

Talk about sensationalism and Glory Hounding !