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Sister in the band of brothers : embedded with the 101st Airborne in Iraq / Katherine M. Skiba.

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LIBRA DS79.76 .S58 2005
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Skiba, Katherine M.
Series:
Modern war studies
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Skiba, Katherine M.
United States. Army. Airborne Division, 101st.
United States.
Iraq War, 2003-2011--Journalists--Biography.
Iraq War, 2003-2011.
Journalists.
Iraq War, 2003-2011--Personal narratives, American.
Genre:
Biographies.
Personal narratives -- American.
Autobiographies.
Personal narratives.
Physical Description:
xvi, 257 pages, 22 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Place of Publication:
Lawrence : University Press of Kansas, [2005]
Summary:
When U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq in March 2003, our soldiers weren't the only ones who put their lives on the line: so did 600 "embedded" journalists, including Katherine M. Skiba. Her riveting memoir provides a vivid you-are-there account of her experiences with the Army's legendary 101st Airborne, the division celebrated for its heroism in World War II as the "Band of Brothers."
Skiba, a reporter and photographer, was the sole female civilian among the 2,300 soldiers of the 159th Aviation Brigade, whose pilots flew Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters into the thick of battle. Her dispatches were a vital lifeline between the troops and their families and earned her a grateful national audience. Reporting on the men and women in uniform with journalistic dedication, natural compassion, and an eye for the absurd, she chronicles her experiences from "media boot camp" to the kick-off of Operation Iraqi Freedom to the fall of Baghdad, including a missile attack on the brigade's desert camp.
Taking readers across the wind-blown deserts of Iraq and into cramped seventy-man tents, where personal space barely exists and tempers can flare, she deftly and sympathetically portrays her brothers- and sisters-in-arms-rigid commanders, gung-ho warriors, and daring aviators, as well as intelligence officers, mechanics, medics, and cooks, among many others. She details her dealings with the soldiers, her clashes with a battalion commander, and her friendship with a lieutenant colonel who helped keep her sane. Meantime she tells of the journalist-husband she left behind-and the encouragement he gave her when the going got rough.
Whether pounding out a story on her laptop, strapping on a gas mask at a moment's notice, or flying toward the frontlines, Skiba stuck it out despite her own doubts and earned the respect of one grizzled sergeant major, who quipped: "You've got balls." The risks were very real for her and anyone else who covered or fought in the war, even in its early days, long before triumph trailed off into something less than permanent victory. Her story testifies to the courage it took to endure such risks, while acknowledging the inevitable costs of war.
Contents:
War games
Back to the heartland
Band of brothers
Sandblasted
"You've got balls"
Shifting sands
Bad guy land
Watching Baghdad fall
Unbedding
Hard landing
Reminiscing.
Notes:
Includes index.
ISBN:
070061382X
OCLC:
56941904

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