The Good Soldiers

David Finkel

Included in:
The New York Times, Top 10 Books of 2009
The New York Times, Michiko Kakutani’s Top 10 Books of 2009
New York Times Book Review, 100 Notable Books of 2009
Publishers Weekly Best Books of 2009
• Amazon.com, Best of 2009: Editors’ Picks
Kirkus Reviews, The Best Books of 2009
Boston Globe Annual Holiday Book Guide 'Simply the best nonfiction'
Chicago Tribune, Our Favorite Nonfiction of 2009
Baltimore Sun 2009 Book Recommendations (Ron Smith)
• Leigh Sales' Top 5 Non-Fiction Books 2009
Army Times Best Military Books of the Decade
Arizona Republic, Notable Books of ‘09
The Christian Science Monitor, Best Books of 2009: Nonfiction
Kansas City Star, The Top 100 Books of 2009
The Plain Dealer, 20 Best Books of 2009/Book Gift Suggestions
Publishers Lunch, The Best of the Best of 2009
Slate, The Best Reads of 2009
The Week, Books of the Year
The WETA Book Studio, Top 10 Books of 2009


'From a Pulitzer Prize–winning writer at the height of his powers comes an incandescent and profoundly moving book: powerful, intense, enraging. This may be the best book on war since the Iliad.'

Geraldine Brooks, author of People of the Book

'This is not only the best non-fiction book I've read this year, but one of the best I have ever read. It was riveting, unputdownable journalism at its very finest. David Finkel, a Pulitzer Prize winning Washington Post journalist, spent the best part of a year with a US army unit sent to Iraq at the very beginning of the surge. It makes no judgment on the merits of the surge as a policy; it simply tells the soldiers' stories. A masterpiece.'

Leigh Sales, presenter of ABC-TV's 'Lateline'

'The Good Soldiers is one of the most harrowing and compelling war books of this generation. It is almost certainly the best book written on the Iraq war because it is the only one that takes us deep into the lives of the soldiers themselves as they try to retake the streets of Baghdad.'

Cameron Stewart (The Weekend Australian)

It was the last-chance moment of the war.

In January 2007, President George W. Bush announced a new strategy for Iraq. It became known as ‘the surge’. ‘Many listening tonight will ask why this effort will succeed when previous operations to secure Baghdad did not. Well, here are the differences’, he told a sceptical nation. Among those listening were the young, optimistic army infantry soldiers of the 2-16, the battalion nicknamed the Rangers. About to head to a vicious area of Baghdad, they decided the difference would be them.

Fifteen months later, the soldiers returned home forever changed.

What is the true story of the surge? And was it really a success? Those are the questions that the Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter David Finkel grapples with in his remarkable report from the front lines. He was with Battalion 2-16 in Baghdad almost every gruelling step of the way.

Combining the action of Mark Bowden’s Black Hawk Down with the literary brio of Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried, The Good Soldiers is an unforgettable work of reportage. And in telling the story of these good soldiers, the heroes and the ruined, Finkel has also produced an eternal tale — not just of the Iraq War, but of all wars, for all time.

'Finkel's account … is riveting, honest and bloodied. The fast-paced, yet often understated, narrative of his book The Good Soldiers creates the sense of a mission flying by the seat of its pants — with Finkel in the midst of the terror.'

Simon Mann (The Age & The Sydney Morning Herald)

'The most honest, most painful, and most brilliantly rendered account of modern war I've ever read.'

(Fortune Magazine)

'This is a wonderfully honest and brutally frank account of the war in Iraq … The book strips the soldiers back to their human core and confronts their humanity and the brutality of modern-day combat in frightening detail.'

Ian McPhedran (Daily Telegraph)

'That war is hell is not a new concept. However, David Finkel's powerful book about an American battalion in the Iraqi surge of 2007 gives the truism a raw force ... The Good Soldiers is a work of masterly reporting by a sensitive yet unsentimental writer. I suspect it will be judged one of the best books about Iraq and the cost of war to its participants.'

Martin van Beynen (Weekend Press (Christchurch, NZ))

'Brilliant, heartbreaking, deeply true. The Good Soldiers offers the most intimate view of life and death in a 21st-century combat unit I have ever read. Unsparing, unflinching, and, at times, unbearable.'

Rick Atkinson, author of In the Company of Soldiers

'David Finkel has written the most unforgettable book of the Iraq war, a masterpiece that will far outlast the fighting. Moving through his chapters is the closest thing to being there.'

David Maraniss, author of They Marched Into Sunlight

'This is the finest book yet written on the platoon-level combat of the Iraq war ... Unforgettable — raw, moving, and rendered with literary control ... No one who reads this book will soon forget its imagery, words, or characters.'

Steve Coll, author of Ghost Wars

'Finkel brilliantly captures the terrors of ordinary men enduring extraordinary circumstances ... ferociously reported, darkly humorous and spellbinding ... Finkel has made art out of a defining moment in history.'

Doug Stanton (New York Times)

'This is the best account I have read of the life of one unit in the Iraq war. It is closely observed, carefully recorded and beautifully written. David Finkel doesn’t just take you into the lives of our soldiers, he takes you deep into their nightmares.'

Thomas E. Ricks, author of Fiasco and The Gamble

'Finkel's keen firsthand reportage, its grit and impact only heightened by the literary polish of his prose, gives us one of the best accounts yet of the American experience in Iraq.'

(Publishers Weekly (starred review))

'Not since Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried has there been such a searing, unembellished and unforgettable look at war as David Finkel's The Good Soldiers, a journal-like account of 15 months spent with the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment of the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, aka the 2-16, aka the "Rangers," in a little slice of vicious hell in Baghdad that everyone, even generals, avoids visiting if they can ... The whole damn book is this damn good, and it makes you feel as never before the waste and grief that marks the human addiction to war. If Finkel doesn't snag his second Pulitizer — this one for a book instead of newspaper articles — then there is no justice in this world.'

(Daily Kos)

'Finkel's lens has the dispassion of the journalist but the focus of someone who has been allowed to be intimate with the rawest of emotions in the rawest of times. The Good Soldiers will have value as a document of one small aspect of the surge, but it also should stand on its own as a valuable piece of combat literature beyond the Iraq War.'

Mark Brunswick (Minneapolis Star Tribune)

'The most impressive piece of literary journalism I've read since ... hmmm ... maybe David Remnick's Lenin's Tomb. I think this book is gonna last. There will be inevitable comparisons by reviewers to Michael Herr's Dispatches. The reporting is detailed and intrepid; the writing is exquisite.'

(The Washington Post’s Achenblog)

'When President George W. Bush ordered the 2007 surge that stepped up the war in Iraq, the evening news gave us statistics (soldiers deployed, suicide bombs detonated) and hopeful or pessimistic reports on the rise and ebb of violence. By contrast, David Finkel's The Good Soldiers could hardly be more specific, more up close and personal.'

(O, The Oprah Magazine)

'I have read hundreds of books about war and almost two dozen books about the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Most of them affected me. But none has affected me as deeply as The Good Soldiers.'

(Kansas City Star)

'In January 2007 George W Bush sent more troops to Iraq in a desperate attempt to stave off a loss. It became known as the surge. Washington Post journalist Finkel travelled with an infantry battalion sent over to take part in the surge and, in The Good Soldiers, he brilliantly chronicles their 15 months in Iraq. Finkel deftly captures the fear, futility and grim humour of a group of young men who face the risk of being killed every day. It's a gripping, fascinating and occasionally gruesome account of what can happen to soldiers both during a war and afterwards. Some of the most harrowing parts are those in which Finkel details the battles fought by wounded soldiers and their families when they return home. It's a masterpiece.'

Glen Humphries (Illawarra Mercury)

'It is Mr. Finkel’s accomplishment in this harrowing book that he not only depicts what the Iraq war is like for the soldiers of the 2-16 — 14 of whom die — but also the incalculable ways in which the war bends (or in some cases warps) the remaining arc of their lives. He captures the sense of comradeship the men develop among themselves. And he also captures the difficulty many of the soldiers feel in trying to adapt to ordinary life back home in the States, and the larger disconnect they continue to feel between the war that politicians and generals discussed and the war that they knew firsthand.'

'Ground War: The Iraq Surge Grunts Knew', Michiko Kakutani (The New York Times)

'In his powerful account of one Army battalion’s struggle to stanch the violence roiling several neighborhoods in Baghdad, David Finkel, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter, offers a grunt-level narrative of the blood, guts, heroism, and tortured logic that sustained the escalation of troops known as “the surge’’ between 2007 and 2008 ... What really distinguishes The Good Soldiers from other accounts of the war in Iraq is how Finkel compares the rhetoric with the realities of the conflict, showing us with gritty detail rather than opining from some ideological perch.'

David Abel (The Boston Globe)

'In April 2007, President George W. Bush announced the US military's new strategy for securing Iraq, which became known as the Surge. Young, patriotic and optimistic infantry soldiers of the 2-16 Battalion, nicknamed the Rangers, were about to be deployed to a particularly dangerous area in Baghdad. Their average age was 19, the youngest 17. Author David Finkel, an editor at The Washington Post, follows them into battle ... These young men undoubtedly are good soldiers and, should you have the courage to read this excellent book, they will break your heart.'

Cheryl Jorgensen (Courier Mail)

'Eschewing moral judgment, policy proposals and military techno-babble, Finkel writes concisely and vividly about trauma and regret, leaving us defenseless against the steadily accruing collateral damage of combat. This is not a new story. Still, to borrow the first sentence of the Ford Madox Ford novel whose title Finkel's reprises, this is the saddest story I have ever heard. Amid the protracted debate about troop deployments in Afghanistan that has considered seemingly every voice but that of the soldiers, The Good Soldiers offers a searing reminder of the human cost of escalation.'

Akiva Gottleib (The Nation)

'I've just finished a remarkable book called The Good Soldiers, by David Finkel. It is the best grunt's-eye view of the war in Iraq that I've read; certainly, it's the best written.'

Joe Klein (Time magazine)

'superb and terrifying account'

Geoff Pevere (Toronto Star)

'Finkel’s sad and wonderful account of soldiers’ experiences of war follows the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry, which was thrown into one of Baghdad’s worst districts as part of the 2007 surge ... Finkel achieves great intimacy with his subjects, charting their changing feelings toward Iraqis, their mission, and their own commander. By the time they are told that they are winning, it’s hard to remember or define what that means. After two members of his platoon are killed twelve days before their tour, already extended three months, is to end, a soldier writes to his wife, “I’m gonna need some help when I get home.”'

Sarah Crichton (The New Yorker)

'a profoundly disturbing portrait of war ... This book was hard to put down, but the futility, despair and horror it documents is even harder to forget.'

Matt Rilkoff (Taranaki Daily News)

'The Good Soldiers by David Finkel is absolutely riveting. This Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter from The Washington Post spent eight months in Iraq during the much-ballyhooed "surge," with the young men in an infantry platoon that was sent to a particularly violent part of Baghdad. These "good soldiers" of the title arrived in the war zone filled with determination to make a difference. Fifteen months later, those who were still whole came home forever changed. Others were killed, and in the most heartbreaking parts of this story we see what happened to those soldiers who were maimed by roadside bombs. This book is simply superb, written from a grunt's-eye perspective of this war, a perspective far different than that of the policymakers in Washington, the theoreticians and the generals you see on TV.'

Ron Smith (2009 book recommendations) (The Baltimore Sun)

'The Good Soldiers is the best book I have read on the Iraq War.'

Gordon Traill (www.peacekeepers.asn.au)

'extremely confronting ... his account of the terrible injuries suffered by the men is horrifying but deeply moving at the same time ... David Finkel's superb and highly-acclaimed book deserves to be widely read and is a fitting tribute to these brave 'good soldiers'.

(Australian Defence Magazine)

David Finkel

Davidfinkel

David Finkel is the national enterprise editor of The Washington Post. He joined the Post in 1990 and has worked for the paper’s national, foreign, and magazine staffs. He has reported from Africa, Asia, Central America, Europe, and throughout the United States, and was part of the Post’s war coverage in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Kosovo.

Among Finkel’s journalism honours are a Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting in 2006 for a series of stories about U.S.-funded democracy efforts in Yemen. He has been a Pulitzer finalist three other times, for both explanatory reporting and feature writing.

A 1977 graduate of the University of Florida, Finkel is married, has two daughters, and lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.

Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/opinions/outlook/the-good-soldiers/

The_good_soldierslr Buy from Readings
Format: Pb
Extent: 304pp
Size: 234mm x 153mm
ISBN (13): 9781921640063
RRP: $35.00
Pub date: October 2009

Rights held:

ANZ, South-East ASia