Monday, November 9, 2009

Purple Heart Purple Heart by Patricia McCormick


My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This novel explores the impact the Iraqi War has on a young American soldier.

When Private Matt Duffy wakes up in an army hospital in Iraq, he's honored with a Purple Heart - the army's medal for those wounded in battle. But he doesn't feel like a hero. He can't quite remember what happened in the Baghdad alley where he was hurt. Matt has suffered a traumatic brain injury and must slowly work to recover his memory and full brain function. The first half of the book deals with Matt’s struggle with his injury, his feelings of isolation and later guilt. The second half follows Matt as he returns to his squad to patrol the streets of Baghdad and how he deals with those realities.


Matt tries to remember just exactly what happened. As events of the attack begin to come back to him, he realizes he may have been responsible for something terrible. Tension builds and he becomes confused about interpretations of the truth and what to tell superiors. Friendship, bravado and juvenile antics counteract the soldiers' guilt, paranoia and unease around Iraqis, whom they are told to befriend but who often prove to be their enemy. McCormick raises questions and will have readers examining not only this conflict but the nature of heroism and war.

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