We March at Midnight: A War Memoir

Author:   Ray McPadden ,  Will Damron
Publisher:   Blackstone Publishing
Edition:   Library Edition
ISBN:  

9781982690939


Publication Date:   02 November 2021
Format:   Audio  Audio Format
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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We March at Midnight: A War Memoir


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Author:   Ray McPadden ,  Will Damron
Publisher:   Blackstone Publishing
Imprint:   Blackstone Publishing
Edition:   Library Edition
ISBN:  

9781982690939


ISBN 10:   1982690933
Publication Date:   02 November 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Audio
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

We March at Midnight is the finest, fiercest account from our recent wars. Bone-clean writing, the author's ability to capture men or mountains in a phrase, and his rare gift for rendering combat's confusion clearly serve a uniquely frank account of post-modern (and eternally primitive) war at the torn-flesh level. Far from the crybaby military memoirs ever in vogue, this book presents the fear and the losses but also the exhilaration of the days that count as wins--with the enemy lying dead and comrades unscathed. Above all, this is an honest book from a soldier who has chosen to hide nothing. At his best, McPadden is Hemingway without the bullshit. -- Ralph Peters, author of Beyond Terror and Cain at Gettysburg Novelist and former US Army Ranger McPadden delivers a raw and intimate memoir of his tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and his struggles with PTSD...McPadden describes firefights and psychological traumas with equal precision, and makes a devastating case that the cost of America's 'forever wars' on its soldiers is too high. This visceral story leaves a mark. -- Publishers Weekly Ray McPadden can write. His first novel was named best military novel in 2019. Now he follows it with a combat memoir, We March at Midnight, that should be required reading for every deploying platoon leader. McFadden's writing is sparse, punchy, and aggressive. He nails the essence of American infantrymen. They are not seeking to understand what brought them to Afghanistan's endless valleys and Iraq's endless deserts. They are seeking the enemy. McFadden is unapologetic and unromantic in his depiction of modern combat. The result is a fast-paced account of combat from the point of view of both traditional Army infantry and special operations forces that captures the essence of the few young men that volunteer to fight for us, over and over. -- Owen West, former assistant secretary of defense, special operations These are war stories told with masterful control of all of the gritty details and a poet's sense of tragedy. McPadden expertly describes his men, the land, the battles, the enemy, and civilians, thoughtfully addressing every aspect of life in a war zone. He succeeds in conveying the voices of soldiers in harm's way and shares his hard-won insights into violence both on and off the battlefield. McPadden's struggle to control the warrior impulse in order to be a good leader and a good husband makes this frank and well-written account particularly inspiring. McPadden's compelling insider's view of twenty-first-century warfare is an exceptional military memoir. -- Booklist Where most Afghanistan and Iraq memoirists chronicle either the grueling daytime slog of counterinsurgent infantrymen or the nighttime first-person-shooter war of counterterrorist commandos, Ray McPadden writes compellingly and candidly of his experience as a young battlefield leader in the thick of both. Covering the exhaustion of a marathon sixteen-month deployment to Afghanistan's rugged east, the thrills of shorter, sprint-like tours with the night-raiding 75th Ranger Regiment, and the guilt and weirdness of life in between, We March at Midnight offers an invaluable account of such key events at the height of America's post-9/11 misadventures as the 10th Mountain Division's plunge into the infamous Korengal valley and the Rangers' secret hunt for Iranian-backed bombmakers during the Iraq surge. -- Wesley Morgan, author of The Hardest Place: The American Military Adrift in Afghanistan's Pech Valley


"We March at Midnight is the finest, fiercest account from our recent wars. Bone-clean writing, the author's ability to capture men or mountains in a phrase, and his rare gift for rendering combat's confusion clearly serve a uniquely frank account of post-modern (and eternally primitive) war at the torn-flesh level. Far from the crybaby military memoirs ever in vogue, this book presents the fear and the losses but also the exhilaration of the days that count as wins--with the enemy lying dead and comrades unscathed. Above all, this is an honest book from a soldier who has chosen to hide nothing. At his best, McPadden is Hemingway without the bullshit. -- ""Ralph Peters, author of Beyond Terror and Cain at Gettysburg"" Novelist and former US Army Ranger McPadden delivers a raw and intimate memoir of his tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and his struggles with PTSD...McPadden describes firefights and psychological traumas with equal precision, and makes a devastating case that the cost of America's 'forever wars' on its soldiers is too high. This visceral story leaves a mark. -- ""Publishers Weekly"" Ray McPadden can write. His first novel was named best military novel in 2019. Now he follows it with a combat memoir, We March at Midnight, that should be required reading for every deploying platoon leader. McFadden's writing is sparse, punchy, and aggressive. He nails the essence of American infantrymen. They are not seeking to understand what brought them to Afghanistan's endless valleys and Iraq's endless deserts. They are seeking the enemy. McFadden is unapologetic and unromantic in his depiction of modern combat. The result is a fast-paced account of combat from the point of view of both traditional Army infantry and special operations forces that captures the essence of the few young men that volunteer to fight for us, over and over. -- ""Owen West, former assistant secretary of defense, special operations"" These are war stories told with masterful control of all of the gritty details and a poet's sense of tragedy. McPadden expertly describes his men, the land, the battles, the enemy, and civilians, thoughtfully addressing every aspect of life in a war zone. He succeeds in conveying the voices of soldiers in harm's way and shares his hard-won insights into violence both on and off the battlefield. McPadden's struggle to control the warrior impulse in order to be a good leader and a good husband makes this frank and well-written account particularly inspiring. McPadden's compelling insider's view of twenty-first-century warfare is an exceptional military memoir. -- ""Booklist"" Where most Afghanistan and Iraq memoirists chronicle either the grueling daytime slog of counterinsurgent infantrymen or the nighttime first-person-shooter war of counterterrorist commandos, Ray McPadden writes compellingly and candidly of his experience as a young battlefield leader in the thick of both. Covering the exhaustion of a marathon sixteen-month deployment to Afghanistan's rugged east, the thrills of shorter, sprint-like tours with the night-raiding 75th Ranger Regiment, and the guilt and weirdness of life in between, We March at Midnight offers an invaluable account of such key events at the height of America's post-9/11 misadventures as the 10th Mountain Division's plunge into the infamous Korengal valley and the Rangers' secret hunt for Iranian-backed bombmakers during the Iraq surge. -- ""Wesley Morgan, author of The Hardest Place: The American Military Adrift in Afghanistan's Pech Valley"""


Author Information

Ray McPadden is a four-tour combat veteran who served as a ground force commander in the elite 2nd Ranger Battalion during the Iraq and Afghan wars. He was awarded a Purple Heart, two Bronze Stars, and a medal for valor. A former Pat Tillman Military Scholar, he is the author of the acclaimed novel And the Whole Mountain Burned, winner of the W. Y. Boyd Literary Award for excellence in military fiction in 2019. He lives in Livingston, Montana, with his wife and children. Will Damron is an Audie Award-nominated narrator. A native of historic Tidewater Virginia, he studied theater at Middlebury College and has performed Off-Broadway and in regional theater throughout New England and Virginia. He lives and records in Los Angeles.

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