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10 reviews
Clint Van Winkle has invited us into his life and into his nightmares. He'll be sitting in a bar sharing "normal" life with us but when the news comes on; the ghosts come out - and not just the dead ones.

The writing flows so smoothly between current events, nightmares and memories that it took awhile to get use to it. One minute we're sitting in the living room drinking a beer and the next paragraph we're sitting in Iraq. It happened that fast for him, it happens that fast for us.

This book show more taught me to be angry. If a minority of our Vets are treated this way, the whole system needs to be taken out and shot.

"Even the Jade Clinic's waiting room seemed inhospitable and cold. The staff's apathy fit right in with the surroundings and they seemed as if they had been specifically handpicked to dole out subpar service. Disheartening isn't a strong enough word to describe what I felt as I watched my fellow veterans being ignored.*"

He mentions some good people in the system but as a whole it leaves a lot to be desired.

This book also taught me appreciation. I've always thought of the military as a group, almost a single body where the feet are very important but still a single body. Now I know it is individuals. The military is made up of people that have the roughest job ever.

Is there a happy ending? Can there ever be a happy ending for a Marine with PTSD? I cried and I laughed and cried some more. Once the story sucked me in it was finished the next day.

Read it. Think about it. Share with your friends. Thank a Vet.

content warning: very realistic war memories

*pg 86 of the Advance Readers' Edition
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This troubling memoir of a Marine attempting to live a normal life in the aftermath of a PTSD diagnosis highlights the need for more research into treating this dehabilitating condition. The author survived his tour in Iraq only to return home to a system unable to deal with his now fractured psyche. The memoir is hard to follow- dreams and real life blur, and there is no clear sense of time to give the reader an anchor, but the effect is to plunge the reader into Van Winkle's shifting show more reality.

I found this book powerful and moving, but a little incomplete. I would have appreciated more information about Van Winkle's wife Sara and her efforts to live with his PTSD. I also would have liked more information on Van Winkle's backstory to help highlight the changes he has experienced since the war. Nevertheless, this book is an excellent account of one man's struggle to rediscover himself in the aftermath of serving in OIF. Highly recommended.
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
[Soft Spots] by [[Clint Van Winkle]] is a partial memoir of Marine Sergeant Clint Van Winkle’s experiences during the initial invasion of Iraq and his experiences with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) after his return to the States. I call it a “partial” memoir because it doesn’t tell the story as a complete picture – just brushstrokes here and there. It reads like a college writing assignment expanded to make it long enough to get published.

The memoir bounces back and forth show more between the present and the past with little transition between the two. I imagine this is to show how PTSD affects Mr. Van Winkle. He oftentimes finds himself in situations where his memories of Iraq are hard to distinguish from his current reality. I found his descriptions of how he was treated by the VA health care system frustrating for two reasons – first because of my anger and frustration for the military health system not taking better care of vets, but also because Mr. Van Winkle’s descriptions of his treatment are so sketchy. I was also left wondering why he left the Marines. Was he forced out because of his problems, or did he leave voluntarily?

Mr. Van Winkle mentions many other people in passing, most notably his wife, Sara. He makes himself out to be pretty hard to live with, so I was left wondering why she stayed with him. I thought he could have given us a better picture of her sacrifices (and by extension other military spouses who go through this), and her love for him.

Van Winkle’s descriptions of how PTSD affects him are good, because you do get a general sense of what it must be like to leave reality at unexpected times throughout your waking moments. However, there is a sentence in the synopsis of the book that describes it as revealing “the mind of a soldier like no other memoir of the Iraq war.” This is a little pretentious since the war is on-going and there haven’t been many memoirs published yet. For someone wanting a better account of war and it’s effects on men’s minds, A Rumor of War by Philip Caputo is a classic and much better written memoir.
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½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
A very personal glimpse of what it is like to have PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) once home from the war in Iraq. Clint Van Winkle's memoir is at first confusing until you realize what is happening in the telling of this story is what he can not help from happening. Flashes and memories all come unbidden when you least expect them to. Every aspect of his life revolves around the things he has seen and the things he has done in war and they haunt him now that he is home and in peace. show more This story is gut-wrenching in that you are not able to tell fact from fiction, memory or nightmare as the reader but you also know the author is having that same difficulty. It is a touching story and one that doesn't have an end yet nor might it ever. show less
½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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