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| From Baghdad to America: Life Lessons from a Dog Named Lava | 
enlarge | Author: Jay Kopelman Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $23.95 Buy New: $11.75 You Save: $12.20 (51%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 22 reviews Sales Rank: 85310
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.2 x 1
ISBN: 1602392641 Dewey Decimal Number: 956.70443092 EAN: 9781602392649 ASIN: 1602392641
Publication Date: July 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New HB in perfect condition. Excellent gift. We ship daily from Seattle, WA Satisfaction guaranteed.
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Product Description An inspired, timely follow-up to the New York Times bestseller From Baghdad, With Love.
Lieutenant Colonel Jay Kopelman won the hearts of readers with his moving story of adopting an abandoned puppy named Lava in a hellish corner of Iraq. For this Marine and his comrades, the puppy served as an important emotional touchstone in a grim and seemingly endless war.
Kopelman now writes about what it's like to be home. He credits his canine best friend with finding his wifein the park, Lava began playing with her dog and the two owners metand for keeping him sane as he readjusted. With the same intelligence and insight he showed in From Baghdad, With Love, Kopelman sets forth more than a dozen lessons, including: Life can change in an instant, but you'll be able to handle it; passion for something can help you tap into your most powerful reserve of energy; have a standard operating procedure for everything; never forget who you are or how you got here. Active and retired troops, soldiers' friends and families, and everyone who has ever loved a dog will embrace this book. 10 b/w photographs.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 17 more reviews...
Disappointing sequel July 2, 2008 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
Unlike most of the reviewers, I was really disappointed that From Baghdad to America wasn't more of a linear narrative, like the first book.
I thought it was really disjointed. What I liked best were the anecdotes here and there about Lava and Jay after their return. I enjoyed reading about his relationship with his wife and stepson. True, the book does offer a lot of insight into PTSD -- for example, what would make a man lash out at his stepson, and what goes through his mind after he does.
But those scenes didn't seem to be in any particular order, and they were interspersed with a lot of rambling about "over there" versus "over here" and laundry lists of terrible things that soldiers have seen and experienced. I think it would be a more moving story without the sweeping generalizations. More specifics, like the soldier with a serious leg injury who inspired Kopelman with his enthusiasm about getting his prosthesis. I was the most touched by a letter from another soldier who befriended a dog and found out later the pup had been executed.
I find it ridiculous that he spends the whole book talking about how he doesn't have PTSD. Not that he didn't think he did, but now realizes he does...but that he doesn't have it, and his visits to therapists are purely for research. Even after all the introspection, his final analysis is that he'll give therapy a try and maybe just possibly, could even benefit from it.
If you love a combat vet, read this book June 21, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book is for anyone who has had a loved one go off to war and wants some insight into what is going on in their loved one's head when they have returned and are struggling to adjust back to what most think is a "normal" life. The author had a constant companion (Lava the dog) who was with him in Iraq and had his own adjustments to make to get a normal life and the author used Lava as a mirror into his own Post Traumatic Stress. This book is definitely on my recommend list.
Excellent read for anyone who knows a combat vet June 9, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is a vivid, harsh, and no-holds-barred account of what it means to openly seek catharsis after seeing through a heavy veil of war.
I expected this to pick up on Lava's journey where From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava left off, so I was right, and wrong. This book isn't an extension of Lava's journey from Iraq, but rather the map of a journey undertaken by many yet recorded by few.
Every returning combat vet from Iraq should be presented with the information in this book, whether they see it in the story of a dog, a man, or themselves. This goes beyond a step-by-step lesson program and into the heart and mind of one good man. Through his example you will see how terrifying, difficult, and important it is to come back from a war and go on with life.
If you're looking for a book that explains in detail and at large what a returning vet has seen, feels, and goes through as they re-join the productive ranks of civilian society, I highly recommend picking up a copy of From Baghdad to America.
Love and War June 24, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
From Baghdad to America was an excellent read and a wonderful follow-on to From Baghdad With Love. Despite its sometimes somber messages, this newest offering from Jay Kopelman is much more hopeful perspective on the war, on America and about trying to live our lives in these troubling times in a way that is good and decent and meaningful. Kopelman has done a remarkable job in his new book of weaving together stories about the terrible nature of war, about the comfort and wonder of canine companionship, about the clash of cultures in America between the few who have served in the military in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere and the overwhelming majority of those who have no idea what that means, about the journey of self-discovery, about the redemptive power of love, and about the triumph of courage and hope over anger and despair. While doing all that, he provided important and (mostly) non-hyperbolic information on the challenges of our men and women in uniform who must adjust to life "over here" after being "over there." I hope Jay Kopelman will continue to keep us informed in his humorous, warm, self-deprecating - and, above all, authentic - voice about the war, about its effects at home and about a good man's struggle to make sense of it all.
wonderful book June 15, 2008 This book is a must read for those of us who wonder what it's been like "over there" in Iraq. I also wanted to know how Lava was doing, but I also wanted to know how the writer was doing. Now I know. He got a puppy out of there and was able to integrate this dog into his life and into his writing, in a way that was simple and beautiful. I found myself in tears as I read this. God bless this man, his family and Lava! Thank you for your service to this country.
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