End of active service

Matt Young, 1986-

Book - 2024

"What was it like? It's the only thing anyone wants to know about war-and the last thing Corporal Dean Pusey wants to talk about, at least not with one of these fat and happy civilians crowding the bar. Dean is two months free from the Marine Corps, and life back in his Indiana hometown is anything but peaceful. That's when the woman next to him offers to buy him a drink. Max is nice-gorgeous, funny, easy to talk to. Dean doesn't dare tell her about the sheep he took care of on his first deployment, only to watch it get torn to shreds by a pack of wild dogs; or the naked, shivering Iraqi teenager his platoon detained after an IED blast. He needs to leave all that behind and become a new person-the kind who sticks around ...when Max gets pregnant. He's white-knuckling it, trying to maintain, and it's not easy. Harder still when his friend and comrade Ruiz starts showing up all over the place like he's been invited-like he didn't die a year ago. He has Max now, he has his baby daughter River. He doesn't have time for ghosts. With his signature black humor, hard-eyed honesty, and stylistic ingenuity, Matt Young delivers a novel that turns the typical war story on its head-beginning not with enlistment but with retirement, and locating the life-or-death stakes not in battle, but in the domestic theaters of fatherhood, family, forgiveness, and love." -- jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
Psychological fiction
Domestic fiction
Published
New York : Bloomsbury Publishing 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Matt Young, 1986- (author)
Physical Description
292 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781639732791
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Iraq War veteran Young (Eat the Apple, a memoir) explores in his artful and piercing debut novel the challenges of returning from combat to civilian life. Former Marine Corps lance corporal Dean Pusey, 23, is back in his hometown of Richfield, Ind., after multiple deployments to Iraq, beginning when he enlisted at 18 in 2006. He moves in with his adoptive mother and pacifist stepfather, gets a job loading trucks for UPS, and drinks with his childhood best friend. At a bar, he meets a young woman named Max and the two stumble into a relationship. All the while, Dean harshly judges the complacency and corpulence of his civilian neighbors, struggles with terrible memories of the war, and enlists the ghost of his deceased brother-in-arms Israel Ruiz, who died after returning home, in imaginary combat drills. Dean is drawn to Max because she's the only person who treats him like he isn't broken, but when she becomes pregnant, he struggles to see himself as a father. Young takes readers deep inside his protagonist's tortured mind to show what PTSD feels like and how, for Dean, "Most every story is a war story." The result is an essential addition to the literature of war. Agent: Chris Clemans, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (June)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

"Really, though, when you get down to it, most everything is a war story, right?" Dean Pusey is having a tough time adjusting to life back in Indiana after having served four years as a Marine in Iraq. He's living with his (adoptive) mother and stepfather, working at UPS, and hanging out with his childhood best friend. None of it, however, is going well, and Dean is still at war--if only with himself and PTSD. Floundering on his way to becoming "someone" rather than "anyone," Dean struggles to discern whether he is the problem in all his relationships, including the one he never had with his birth mother. Unfortunately, the discernment process involves a lot of alcohol, some drugs, bar fights, a rifle, and pretend battle exercises. Flashbacks to brutal episodes Dean witnessed and participated in during his tours of duty come fast and furious, but Dean is not ready, willing, or able to reveal what he's still carrying around in his head. Debut novelist Young deftly maneuvers between Dean's postdischarge life and the corrosive and brutalizing events of his military service and clearly conveys the jarring realities of transitioning from wartime to lifetime. As Dean narrates the course of what he promises will be a love story--while opining that war stories underpin almost every experience--humor and perceptive insights mark the storytelling; people he meets want to hear about his war experiences, but what they really want to do is to tell him about their own, or secondhand, war stories. Young, the author of Eat the Apple (2018), a memoir detailing his own service with the Marines in Iraq, delivers a cleareyed, nonsentimental chronicle of the corrosive and far-reaching effects of war and its inevitable aftermath. War is hell, but Young shows us that what happens afterward can be worse. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.