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A raw and rampaging debut novel from the author of the 'inventive, unsparing, irreverent and consistently entertaining' (NYTBR) memoir Eat the Apple'examining the war after the war for US veterans: returning home.

What was it like? It's the only thing anyone wants to know about war'and the last thing Corporal Dean Pusey wants to talk about, at least not with one of these fat and happy civilians crowding the bar. Dean is two months free from the Marine Corps, and life back in his Indiana hometown is anything but peaceful.

That's when the woman next to him offers to buy him a drink. Hope is nice'gorgeous, funny, easy to talk to. Dean doesn't dare tell her about the sheep he took care of on his first deployment, only to watch it get torn to shreds by a pack of wild dogs; or the naked, shivering Iraqi teenager his platoon detained after an IED blast. He needs to leave all that behind and become a new person'the kind who sticks around when Hope gets pregnant. He's white-knuckling it, trying to maintain, and it's not easy. Harder still when his friend and comrade Ruiz starts showing up all over the place like he's been invited'like he didn't die a year ago. He has Hope now, he has his baby daughter River. He doesn't have time for ghosts.

With his signature black humor, hard-eyed honesty, and stylistic ingenuity, Matt Young delivers a novel that turns the typical war story on its head'beginning not with enlistment but with retirement, and locating the life-or-death stakes not in battle, but in the domestic theaters of fatherhood, family, forgiveness, and love.

End of Active Service

  • By Matt Young

    A raw and rampaging debut novel from the author of the 'inventive, unsparing, irreverent and consistently entertaining' (NYTBR) memoir Eat the Apple'examining the war after the war for US veterans: returning home.

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  • Book Details

    Imprint: Bloomsbury US
    Publication date: 18/06/2024
    Format:  Hardback | 304 pages

  • About the Author

    Matt Young is a writer, teacher, and veteran. He holds an MA from Miami University and an MFA from Pacific Lutheran University, and he is the recipient of fellowships from Words After War and the Carey Institute for Global Good. His work has appeared in Catapult, Granta, Tin House, Time, LitHub and elsewhere. He teaches at Centralia College and lives in Olympia, Washington. His first book, Eat the Apple, was called 'the Iliad of the Iraq War' by Pulitzer Prize winner Tim Weiner.

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