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"Equal doses shocking, hilarious, brutal, thought-provoking ... gripping from start to finish." -JOHN STILLMAN, Vietnam veteran and award-winning author of the memoir Jumping from Helicopters Adam Harris was the least likely person to enlist in the military: he'd grown up marginalized as the sole Jewish kid in his public school in Ottawa, Canada, and learned early on not to trust authority. As the youngest and smallest in his class, and burdened with a severe speech impediment, Adam looked like an easy target. But it wasn't long before the entire elementary school realized he was quite the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Equal doses shocking, hilarious, brutal, thought-provoking ... gripping from start to finish." -JOHN STILLMAN, Vietnam veteran and award-winning author of the memoir Jumping from Helicopters Adam Harris was the least likely person to enlist in the military: he'd grown up marginalized as the sole Jewish kid in his public school in Ottawa, Canada, and learned early on not to trust authority. As the youngest and smallest in his class, and burdened with a severe speech impediment, Adam looked like an easy target. But it wasn't long before the entire elementary school realized he was quite the opposite. Using his hard-won agility and pummeling fists, he was never one to back down. After moving to the States as a teenager with his family, Adam's life took a serious downward trajectory. Kicked out of school, fired from his job, and tempted by a life of crime, he did the unthinkable: intent on salvaging his life, Adam joined the US Army. Despite the various injuries he had already sustained-including nearly tearing off his left foot not once but twice and telescoping his left femur-Adam easily pushed through the physical demands of Basic Training. The hardest part was the psychological servitude the military demanded. Still, he set off for his first deployment full of optimism, hopeful for a career that would give him a respectable future. Not long in, a field accident left Adam with a horrific injury. Labeled AWOL and left for dead by his platoon sergeant, he wasn't found until a week later. At the Rhein-Main airbase hospital in Germany, he became immersed not only in the arduous chore of recovery but in the sobering realization that his fidelity had been rewarded with zero loyalty in return. With not much to do besides lie in bed and let his anger simmer by day and drink copiously to numb the pain by night, he vowed to not just rock the Army boat but to tip it over. As a reward for preventing catastrophe, Adam became the fuse setter for the Death Dealers, a position fraught with unparalleled risk. Further assignments pushed him to the brink of human endurance: sentry duty-four hours on and two hours off, around the clock, every day for eight weeks; sustaining twenty- to forty-below temps in the dense Bavarian forest for days on end; maneuvering a twelve-ton M-548 through weedy backroads, lined with steep ditches, with zero visibility in the pitch black of night. Weighted by stress and a hefty chip on his shoulder, Adam found solace in alcohol, beautiful girls, and antagonizing the higher-ups-details of which he confided to his brother via candid letters home. These letters are interspersed throughout the book, allowing the reader into the sometimes bluntly crude, sometimes profoundly reflective mind of a soldier. Told with rawness, honesty, and no shortage of wry humor and artful pranks, Adam chronicles the grueling two years he spent in the US Army during the Cold War, from 1984 to 1986-"where brothers from another share the worst and best with you, without ever knowing the details of each others' lives; where rewards and punishments are doled out without rhyme or reason, with neither fairness nor justice playing a part; where the separate reality allows for the insane to be the norm and for the unthinkable to be common."
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Autorenporträt
Adam Harris resides in the northeast of Ontario, Canada, way above the line of latitude where most in North America live, in a town so small that during the sixty seconds it takes to pass through, one would be forgiven for not noticing the one and only traffic light (which stays green all the time). Too remote for a mailman, the post office where he picks up his mail also sells hunting licenses and shares its roof with the bait shop. His closest neighbor is a chipmunk whose precociousness is matched only by his cuteness and gluttony for nuts. Far less welcome, and fortunately far more timid, are the bears that seem to spontaneously spring from the surrounding forests. With degrees in dietetics, nutrition, food science, and the culinary arts, as well as a background in restaurant work, Adam sees the world through food-colored glasses. The first question he asks himself every day is, "What's for breakfast?" followed shortly by "What's for dinner?" He started cooking at an early age and feels grateful to be able to prep and serve pretty much anything he wants from his favorite restaurant: his own kitchen. Parts of Adam's resume read like something out of a Dickens' novel--mapmaker, cannon crewman, chimney sweep--while others range from ditch digger to Le Cordon Bleu assistant chef to senior consumer scientist. He's spent most of his life working abroad and is now happy to be home spending his days building furniture and tinkering with his model ships. And maybe, just maybe, if plied with enough whisky, he'll tell some more stories.