Patsy Rogers is a U.S. Army veteran and writer whose work bridges the worlds of personal testimony, history, and cultural preservation. With a Bachelor of Science in Terrorism and Counterterrorism Studies from the Henley-Putnam School of Strategic Security and an Undergraduate Certificate in Terrorism Studies from American Military University, she brings an authentic perspective shaped by both lived experience and academic study.
Her debut memoir, Still Dare to Call It Home, weaves together the raw realities of deployment, the fragile beauty of cultural heritage under threat, and the resilience of those who refuse to be erased by war. Blending narrative storytelling with deep reflection, Rogers creates work that is both intimate and universal-stories of memory, survival, and the fight to protect identity in times of upheaval.
She writes with the conviction that cultural property is not just about monuments and artifacts, but about the people whose stories and futures are bound to them. Through her work, she hopes to remind readers that even in the most fractured landscapes, hope and humanity endure.