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A seasoned writer and teacher of memoir explores both the
difficulties inherent in writing about personal trauma and the
techniques for doing so in a compelling way. Since 2013, David
Chrisinger has taught military veterans, their families, and other
trauma survivors how to make sense of and recount their stories of
loss and transformation. The lessons he imparts can be used by
anyone who has ever experienced trauma, particularly people with a
deep need to share that experience in a way that leads to
connection and understanding. In Stories Are What Save Us,
Chrisinger shows-through writing exercises, memoir excerpts, and
lessons he's learned from his students-the most efficient ways to
uncover and effectively communicate what you've learned while
fighting your life's battles, whatever they may be. Chrisinger
explores both the difficulties inherent in writing about personal
trauma and the techniques for doing so in a compelling way. Weaving
together his journey as a writer, editor, and teacher, he reveals
his own deeply personal story of family trauma and abuse and
explains how his life has informed his writing. Part craft guide,
part memoir, and part teacher's handbook, Stories Are What Save Us
presents readers with a wide range of craft tools and storytelling
structures that Chrisinger and his students have used to process
conflict in their own lives, creating beautiful stories of growth
and transformation. Throughout, this profoundly moving,
laser-focused book exemplifies the very lessons it strives to
teach. A foreword by former soldier and memoirist Brian Turner,
author of My Life as a Foreign Country, and an afterword by
military wife and memoirist Angela Ricketts, author of No Man's
War: Irreverent Confessions of an Infantry Wife, bookend the
volume.
Raised as an army brat, Angie Ricketts though she knew what she was
in for when she eloped with Darrin - then an Infantry Lieutenant -
on the eve of his deployment to Somalia. Since then, Darrin, now a
Colonel, has been deployed eight times, serving four of those tours
in Iraq and Afghanistan. And Ricketts has lived every one of those
deployments intimately - distant enough to survive the years apart
from her husband, but close enough to share a common purpose and a
lifestyle they both love.With humor, candor, and a brazen attitude,
Ricketts pulls back the curtain on a subculture many readers know,
but few ill ever experience Counter to the dramatized snapshot seen
on Lifetime's Army Wives, Ricketts digs into the personalities and
posturing that officers' wives must survive daily - whether
navigating a social event at the base, suffering through a
husband's prolonged deployment, or reacting to a close friend's
death in combat.At its core, No Man's War is a story of sisterhood
and survival. As Ricketts states: "We tread those treacherous
waters together. Do we sometimes shove each other's heads
underwater for a few seconds? Maybe even on purpose? Of course. Are
we sometimes dragged underwater ourselves by the undertow created
by all of us struggling together too closely? Without a doubt. But
we never let each other drown. Our buoyancy is our survival."
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