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Wrath-Bearing Tree
Wrath-Bearing Tree
  • Fiction
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Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Matthew J. Hefti, Nonfiction

Letter to US #2: It’s Up to You

October 13, 2015 by Matthew J. Hefti

  Dear NRA Members, 2nd Amendment lovers, Fraternal Order of Police members, legislators, judges, voters, prosecutors, federal agents, state agents, municipal agents, county sheriffs, veterans...

Why Black Literature Matters
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Why Black Literature Matters

September 14, 2015 by David James

 “The Thankful Poor”, Henry Ossawa Tanner, 1894 Last month in The Atlantic, Egyptian writer and activist Alaa Al Aswany wrote an excellent essay on How Literature Inspires Empathy. He g...

Army_US_Post_FLAG
Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Matthew J. Hefti, Nonfiction

Letters to Us: #1. May All Those Who Labor Find Rest

September 8, 2015 by Matthew J. Hefti

 

2015.09.06, Labor Day

Dear America,

You inspire me into a coma. 

...

The Extremes on Both Sides of the Gun Debate May be Racist
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

The Racist Arguments For, Against Gun Control

September 4, 2015 by Adrian Bonenberger

Gun violence is deeply entrenched in America. Chances are, if you’ve spent any time outside the Upper East Side of Manhattan in the last 30 years, you’ve been touched by gun violence personally—som...

Reinhold Messner in his 1980s prime
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Reinhold Messner as Nietzschean Übermensch

August 26, 2015 by David James

One month ago, on July 24, 2015, the sixth and final Messner Mountain Museum opened to the public on the top of a mountain in northern Italy, a couple hours from where I live. This newest museum is...

Zombie apocalypse
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Thoughts on the Zombie Apocalypse

August 25, 2015 by Adrian Bonenberger

A piece about who finds zombie narratives compelling and why.

...

Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Dispatch from Greece: Myth, Tragedy, Resistance, and Hope

July 27, 2015 by David James

Herodotus begins his great work by tracing the historical origins of the Persian War to myths involving conflict between Europe and Asia, such as the rape of Io and Europa by Zeus, the story of Jas...

Some Thoughts on the Assassination of Osama bin Laden
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Some Thoughts on the Assassination of Osama bin Laden

June 19, 2015 by David James

  During my first tour in Afghanistan in 2005, I was one of those who still thought that the war was justified and worth fighting. The search for bin Laden was ongoing and America held (or was...

The Death Penalty and State-Sanctioned Violence
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

The Death Penalty and State-Sanctioned Violence

June 5, 2015 by David James

A confluence of recent events has led to the practice of capital punishment in America becoming a matter of greater public interest and debate for the first time in several decades. Foremost a...

Berliner Fernsehturm in der Dämmerung
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Berlin, and the Trip East

June 1, 2015 by Adrian Bonenberger

They’re rebuilding Prussian Berlin. Not exactly the way it was before World War II, but Prussia is unquestionably the inspiration. The city is unified, the country is unified, and for the fir...

Malaparte and his typewriter
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Curzio Malaparte: Great & Anonymous WWII Writer

May 7, 2015 by Adrian Bonenberger

How World War II gets remembered isn’t accurate, and for Curzio Malaparte, it's not even true. Not the American version, not the Russian, not anywhere, really. At best, our memo...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Why Don’t Afghans Love Us: Elliot Ackerman’s Green on Blue

April 16, 2015 by Adrian Bonenberger

 There aren’t many “literary” fiction books out about Afghanistan, and almost none authored by veterans. Brian Castner, a veteran of Iraq, published an essay in Los Angeles R...

Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

The Land of the Balaklava

February 18, 2015 by David James

“Theirs not to make reply, theirs not to reason why, theirs but to do and die: Into the valley of Death rode the six hundred.” These are lines from Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem “The Charge of the L...

Gun violence and the second amendment
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

On Gun Violence and the Second Amendment

February 13, 2015 by David James

America has a problem with violence, and specifically gun violence. This is a fact, not an opinion, and is confirmed with a glance at the statistics, backed up as well by abundant anecdotal evidenc...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Preparation For The Next Life – What We Want Is Not What We Will Get

February 2, 2015 by Adrian Bonenberger

After war, most societies look for love. Instead of dealing with the various manifest issues that remain after years of chaos and wanton murder, they seek the understanding and hope that can o...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Top 4 Contributors on Wrath Bearing Tree, 2014

December 31, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

With so much incredible, breakthrough writing happening at The Wrath Bearing Tree this year, the editors wanted to set a moment aside from their around-the-clock analysis of emergent (and urge...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Brad Pitt and the Myth of the Wehrmacht

December 30, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

Brad Pitt loves playing in WWII movies. He loves fighting Nazis, who, incredibly, really existed, and were (if anything) even more evil than comes across on a movie screen. For 12 years, one o...

Christmas Truce 1914, as seen by the Illustrated London News.
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Goodbye to Christmas Truces

December 24, 2014 by David James

We have recently passed the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War, which has occasioned a fair amount of press coverage looking back at the so-called (and ill-named) “Great War&rdq...

American Sniper
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

American Sniper and the Hero Myth

December 17, 2014 by David James

American Sniper, a new film based on the book of the same name, is being released on Christmas Day. Directed by Clint Eastwood and starring and produced by Bradley Cooper, it tells the story of Nav...

Yes, We Tortured Some Folks
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Yes, We Tortured Some Folks

December 15, 2014 by David James

By now everyone in the world has heard about the recently released U.S. Senate Torture Report, which details the shocking and mind-numbing inhumanity of the torture program sanctioned by the Bush a...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Against Obvious Racism

December 8, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

Let’s be honest about racism. It’s here. And it’s not going anywhere. But its prevalence is surprising, again, if we’re being honest: we’ve been under the mistaken impressio...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Peace in the Middle East (by Xmas 2014): Nukes

November 4, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

I have the solution to the full-blown crisis in the Middle East, and as usual, America is the only country that can do it right. Russia has the resources, but let’s face it – they&rsquo...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

America and Iran: The Great Post-Persia Hangover

October 9, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

We never meant things to get out of hand the way they did in Iran. Let's agree about that to begin with, let's agree that the CIA's role in replacing a democratically elected ...

Afghanistan flag
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

These Colors Don’t Run: Afghanistan Edition

September 30, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

It’s sad when you already know what people are going to say when you tell them that staying in Afghanistan today is as stupid and pointless now as it was in 2003, or 2009, or 2011. They’re going to...

Islamic State Flag
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

The Wrath of Islam

August 30, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

I read a piece on Vox recently (compliments of former roommate and exceptional human being Damien Spleeters) the point of which was to disabuse readers of “myths” surrounding the Islami...

Fury movie
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Fury: A Realistic but Stupid, Useless Film

August 3, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

Hollywood does not know how to make a film about war. This has been proven on so many different occasions, often averred on this blog, across the spectrum of time and experience, that I almost wond...

Suicide rates by service
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Suicide and the Military

June 19, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

There are two substantial issues facing the American military and veteran community today. The first, a logical and narratively unified reaction to years of hero-worship, is a backlash against the ...

What if they gave a war
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Reaction to Helen Benedict’s “The Moral Confusion of Post-War America”

May 31, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

Thought experiment. Someone you know, and who knows you, but not very well, says in public that you have no integrity. Like this: “You have no integrity. Zero. None. That’s what I think. This is my...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Wil S. Hylton’s “Vanished”: a Review

May 18, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

Vanished, Wil S. Hylton’s book about the search to identify and return servicemembers’ remains to their families – no matter the obstacle – is a compelling read. It’s a non-fiction account, somethi...

lorem ipsum for whom the bell tolls
Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Passive Aggressive: Understanding the Tenor of New War Literature

April 29, 2014 by Adrian Bonenberger

The suicide bomber came from the wrong direction. He drove a maroon Toyota Corolla into the middle of a group of Afghan police and militia – just an hour into a massive  operation to help defeat th...

Espionage Act
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

The Espionage Act and the Cult of Secrecy

September 23, 2013 by David James

The most important compromise that allowed for the passage of the U.S. Constitution was that there be included a series of amendments called the Bill of Rights, which guaranteed certain freedoms to...

Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Dr. King’s Final Dream

September 8, 2013 by David James

We recently witnessed the 50th anniversary celebration of the famous 1963 “March on Washington”, which was a peaceful gathering in the nation’s capital to advocate for Civil Right...

Bigotry Prejudice
Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

On Racism and Other Bigotries

August 26, 2013 by David James

Racism, anti-Semitism, sexism, homophobia, tribalism, nationalism, parochialism, xenophobia, jingoism, bigotry, intolerance, hatred. These are the topics to be discussed presently. I was inspired t...

Adrian Bonenberger, Archives, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

Acronyms and 21st Century Conflict

August 3, 2013 by Adrian Bonenberger

Some useful acronyms by which to understand 21st century conflict: COIN: Counter Insurgency. Employed by ISAF in Afghanistan from 2003-2010. Broadly speaking, the strategy wherein a friendly force ...

Archives, David James, Issue 000: Pre-March 2017, Nonfiction

A Veteran Relooks at War

August 1, 2013 by David James

We have collectively learned much in the last couple years about a secret and frightful new war machine — Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, aka drones. That is a topic for another day, however. The n...

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