"Finely wrought. . . . A vivid portrait of a young woman who fled the familiar and fell into a situation beyond her control." --New York Daily News
"Deftly, respectfully, movingly, Bragg has written Lynch's story with extraordinary power. Brave, convincing and wonderfully sweet." --The Baltimore Sun
"Bragg brilliantly paints a portrait. . . . Lynch's voice is heard, and through her eyes, we learn the importance of what it means to be an American." --The Oklahoman
"Rick Bragg . . . deftly separates fact from conjecture. . . . A convincing record . . . a minor miracle." --Winston Salem Journal
"Bragg is a gifted wordsmith. He crafts wonderful sentences. . . . He writes lovingly and beautifully about the hills of West Virginia where Lynch was born and raised." --San Francisco Chronicle
"Bragg tells the story as Jessica lived it . . . [and] in the telling, her story illuminates the stories of countless others." --San Antonio Express-News
"There is probably more truth--sweet, human, undeniable truth--in Rick Bragg's fine book, I Am A Soldier, Too than we have seen in anything about her experience so far--including the nightly news. For here, captured in Bragg's distinctive prose, his appreciation of working people and their hardships, Jessica Lynch's story comes into its full surround as a quintessentially American journey." --The New Orleans Times-Picayune
"I Am a Soldier, Too does Jessica Lynch's story justice without contributing to the distortion that has plagued it." --The Plain Dealer
"A compelling story." --Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Lyrical. . . . Bragg is a storyteller. . . . He knows how to use palpable detail to put us inside the emotions of his characters." --Orlando Sentinel
"Bragg . . . gives a cinematic account of the desperate firefight that mortally wounded Lynch's Army buddy, Lori Piestewa, and 10 others. . . . Lynch's painful recovery . . . is vividly described." --The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Lynch is a true hero in the best tradition of a nation that intuitively prefers modest honesty to grandstanding bravado." --Los Angeles Times
"There is a modesty about Lynch in the book . . . that is at odds with the months-long media ruckus over her ordeal." --The Wall Street Journal
"A gripping account of the fight that engulfed Lynch and 32 fellow members of the 507th Maintenance Company. . . . This book is a survival narrative, a story of fighting against fear and pain and isolation and trying desperately to sustain hope." --Houston Chronicle
"Bragg skillfully gives the story depth and immediacy." --Ft. Worth Star-Telegram