Loser's Memorial
Told from alternating perspectives between a Moroccan boy falsely accused of being a terrorist, and a down-on-his luck American who ends up in jail, Loser's Memorial follows both as they descend into the surreal and self-perpetuating world of war for profit.
World War I spawned the literary masterpiece Johnny Got His Gun. World War II led to Catch-22. The Cold War to Dr. Strangelove. The Vietnam War brought us Apocalypse Now.
With each tragic war comes great art not only critical of the conflict, but providing fresh insights on human nature. Loser's Memorial continues this great legacy, by using as its backdrop the ongoing War On Terror, CIA black sites and the many secret wars driven by profit alone. In short, Loser's Memorial updates the anti-war work for the current generation.
Prepare to brave the banality of evil and remember, sometimes the only way to escape a twisted situation is to become more twisted. Get the novel today!
From the Author
"As the barriers to communication and understanding around the world fall, any new novel about a conflict will ring false if you don't tell it from at least both sides. What I wanted to do with Loser's Memorial is highlight the stories of those who aren't even fighting, but rather are caught up in war either via exploitation or simply by being in the wrong place at the wrong time."
"I love hard rock and horror so I brought that sensibility to the story. I mixed that in with tender moments of feeling and doubt as well. I wanted to work on a new type of fiction in way, encompassing the whole human experience filled with uncertainty and doubt. Mostly I wanted to describe the fight of trying to stay sane in a world of insanity and violence. The young people fight this fight the hardest. Their sense of injustice is strong, but their response isn't always rational. Sometimes you win that fight and sometimes you lose."
"The concept of a Loser's Memorial has always struck me. There should be one, somewhere. We have so many monuments to the dead, so many to winners. But there are losers as well, and I mean loser in its fullest sense, those who are discarded, those who have failed, those who were cast out. If history is told by the victors, that's only half the story. Why not learn the other part of the story?"
"My favorite stories growing up were those that had an element of rebellion in them. Loser's Memorial was so much fun to write because I had two protagonists, each fighting in their own way against different tentacles of an unjust and cruel system. They are definitely underdogs, and maybe they will lose, but it will be one hell of a fight."
From the Back Cover
So goes the oath that Pete's radical father forced him to take in 2004, but just a few years later, escaping jail by taking advantage of the newly signed "Cons-to-Soldiers" bill, Pete finds himself in the middle of the Iraq War.
Thousands of miles away, an innocent Moroccan boy named Jamil is kidnapped and sold by bandits who collect bounties for capturing suspected terrorists.
Together the two young men descend into the lawless world of unsupervised military contractors and secret prisons, caught in the profiteering born from the War on Terror, where the surreal becomes horrifyingly real.
Both end up fighting a losing battle to retain their humanity as they learn that sometimes the only hope of escaping a twisted situation is to become more twisted.
The Story Behind This Book
I've always enjoyed Hard Rock. Whenever I hear that music, or any kind of music, really - I see images in my mind. The origin of this book can be traced back to the Alice In Chains song, "Rooster." As far as I'm aware, the song is about Vietnam, but I wanted to write a story and update it for modern times, so I chose to write about the Iraq War. Further, I've always enjoyed movies, books, stories, music, etc. that doesn't just entertain, but has something to say, something to carry with you and think about as you move through life. I especially loved the commentary on the absurd cruelty of war in the book Johnny Got His Gun and the movie Dr. Strangelove. I wanted to continue that legacy of literature versus oppression, cruelty, war and stupidity. Loser's Memorial is that dream fulfilled.