One Way Soldiers Die

One Way Soldiers Die

by T. Martin Koller
One Way Soldiers Die

One Way Soldiers Die

by T. Martin Koller

eBook

$2.99 

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Overview

PTSD is now a well known malady, generally brought about by experiencing a traumatic event or events. During the time of the Vietnam war, this phenomenon was poorly understood, and often misinterpreted. As a result, many of the soldiers who suffered from this were often classed as malingerers, cowards, or once back in civilian life, were treated as if they were simply mentally ill, crazy. Mental illness was still stigmatized in those days, so that rather than being helpful, most people simply avoided or ignored the sufferers. That happens in our time as well, but was more pervasive back in the 1970s and earlier. Because their malady was not a recognized, specific mental condition, many soldiers who were dealing with PTSD were ignored and misunderstood. Certainly, they received no support from the government or the society in which they found themselves. Occasionally they became violent, a threat to others around them, or to themselves. This novelette, loosely based upon an actual case, attempts to explore the mental and physical world of such a returning veteran. The reader will accompany him as he reaches the denouement of his situation.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940155564478
Publisher: Thomas Koller
Publication date: 06/19/2018
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 1,014,761
File size: 121 KB

About the Author

The author has lived in the U.S., Canada, China, and now resides in Taiwan. He is married and has more children, by more wives, than he cares to enumerate. His working career includes working in libraries and bookstores, land surveying, civil and electronic engineering technician, and owner of a company which provided computer and networks systems support. Late in life, he developed a severe and crippling ailment. This limited his mobility so that he returned to university and took a B.A. and M.A. in English Language Studies. Since that time, he has taught in Canada, China, and Taiwan. He also writes things.

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