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Paperback Peripheral Book

ISBN: B0GZ4SNKXQ

ISBN13: 9798995991311

Peripheral

Conner's life seems to have leveled out. He is flying high with his new girlfriend, a stark contrast from the years of constant deployments in the aftermath of September 11th. Still he is excited to see his old Air Force buddies again. But when they are finally reunited for a four-day sun filled bachelor party stretching from Miami to Key West, his good friends aren't quite how he remembered them.

Experience beaches, breweries, dance clubs, and alluring teal waters as hidden traumas lie in wait just beneath the surface. The past slowly finds its way into the light, as the limits of even the deepest bonds are tested. Gritty and unflinching, this story examines the cost of military service, the weight of memory and the true meaning of friendship.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$16.68
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Related Subjects

Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Outside My Comfort Zone, and Glad I Went

Until recently, I knew almost nothing about military life beyond what I'd absorbed from television and film. I'd never personally known anyone who enlisted, and like a lot of people, I carried my share of assumptions about who chooses that path and why. I'm a college-educated, liberal progressive woman who usually reaches for sci-fi, fantasy, or nonfiction — this book was about as far outside my lane as it gets. And yet I couldn't put it down. What makes Stanfield's writing so effective is how he dismantles stereotypes without ever feeling like he's lecturing. He introduces four strikingly different characters and lets us watch each one process trauma in his own way, until they stop feeling like "soldiers" and start feeling like people you know. Less than 1% of Americans currently serve, and yet the popular image of them is so often flattened into something emotionless and macho. Stanfield refuses that flattening. He gives these men interiority, contradiction, tenderness — and in doing so, gave me a kind of understanding and compassion I didn't have going in. What surprised me most was how literary the book is underneath its momentum. The prose moves fast and the story pulls you forward, but Stanfield is clearly working in layers — there's a current of metaphor and symbolism running through the narrative that I suspect rewards rereading more than I caught the first time. It's rare to find a book that's this emotionally raw and this intellectually constructed at once. The setting helps too: the group's journey through the Florida Keys is rendered so vividly that it's now firmly on my list for my next vacation. Our country feels more divided by the day, and books like this one feel like a quiet antidote — a way to understand people whose lives look nothing like our own. Stanfield pushed me well outside my comfort zone, and somehow made it the most comfortable place to land. Read this book.
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