The Stick Soldiers
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
At age nineteen, Hugh Martin withdrew from college for deployment to Iraq. After training at Fort Bragg, Martin spent 2004 in Iraq as the driver of his platoon sergeant's Humvee. He participated in hundreds of missions including raids, conducting foot patrols, clearing routes for IEDs, disposing of unexploded ordnance, and searching thousands of Iraqi vehicles. These poems recount his time in basic training, his preparation for Iraq, his experience withdrawing from school, and ultimately, the final journey to Iraq and back home to Ohio.
Hugh Martin holds an MFA from Arizona State University. He is a Stegner Fellow at Stanford University.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Martin served with the U.S. Army in Iraq between 2003 and 2005; his solid, sad verse debut chronicles that experience, along with the months before and the years after. Stateside training generates some of his strangest, harshest poems, including a prose anecdote that might describe a murder. Time back at home, in snowy Ohio, prompts alienated, ambivalent regret, comparable at best to Randall Jarrell's poems on World War II airmen and veterans. Yet the bulk of the book, and its reason for being, involve Martin's time in Iraq. Sand gets everywhere, IEDs could be anywhere, children are sources at once of pathos and danger, and camaraderie is all-important. "We avoid trash, disturbed soil, animal carcasses./ We arrest men// who dig beside the road./ We hate the ground." Some pages portray other soldiers, grim, friendly, naive: "Smith, shirtless, curls forty-pound dumbbells,/ part of his plan for home:// a sex life." Other sentences take on the scenes and the moments of combat: "You aim. Your first shot./ But the truck slows. When you adjust, your foot slips,/ you fall below the edge, unable to see." Now a Stegner Fellow at Stanford, Martin breaks little new ground in the craft of verse. What he offers instead along with the very few other Iraq war poets (Brian Turner, for example) noticed so far are thoughtful recollections, scary memories, articulate reflections, and the resolve of a man who has been there.