"This may be the most bracingly honest, refreshing account of the Afghan war that I've ever read."
--Sebastian Junger, New York Times Bestselling author of War and Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging
"The Marine Corps is a weird place and when you go to war everything only gets weirder. You see beauty and horror, tragedy and joy, savagery and kindness. In short, it's a mess; and it takes a camera obscura to capture it all. Miles Lagoze did this in his groundbreaking film and he's going to do it again in his memoir."
--Elliot Ackerman, National Book Award Finalist and author of Places and Names: On War, Revolution, and Returning
Praise for Miles Lagoze's Combat Obscura "An eye-opening dispatch from a conflict mired in confusion." --The New York Times "The camera documents reality as it simultaneously creates a version of it - a mix of therapy, confessional, and a mirror held up to young, grime-streaked faces." --The Washington Post "A warts-and-all approach at in-the-trenches behavior and misbehavior." --The Hollywood Reporter "An unexpurgated 'making of' of the Afghan Campaign. This remarkable film comes across as war's backstage story - it's about the stuff they leave out of the official coverage." --Film Comment "So raw the Corps doesn't want you to see it. One of the most genuine looks at what the Forever War was like for those who waged it." --Task & Purpose "Depicts the war beneath the narratives, capturing the soldier's experience with an immediacy that explodes political abstraction, placing it in a more humanist context." --Newsweek "A filmmaking masterpiece... The film's true brilliance lies in its situational hysteria, a scene-by-scene unpredictability that serves as a microcosm of a war with no end -- and no definitive outcome -- in sight." --Military Times "Detonates any lingering fantasies of military heroism." --AV Club "If the military is a microcosm of our country, Miles Lagoze's book is a warning for our society--an indictment of not just our greedy war machine but of the culture that ignores and even supports it. Lagoze turns on a night vision camera in a dark corner and instead of scattering, the roaches flock and perform, reveal their true selves. Shelve it aside Michael Herr's Dispatches and Evan Wright's Generation Kill."
--Matt Young, author of Eat the Apple
"Whistles From the Graveyard hits, immediate and ruthless. An important and courageous record of a catastrophic time."
--Sean T. Conroe, author of Fuccboi: A Novel
"Lays bare just how far from the truth the official word is. . . this book is tremendous."
--Andy Levy, from The Daily Beast's The New Abnormal podcast
"A raw, introspective look at the harsh realities of war, a vivid snapshot of some of the soldiers who were sent to fight the 'Global War on Terror, ' and a story of the human 'costs' of endless wars"
--Francis P. Sempa, Real Clear
"Gonzo, ghoulish, and unforgettable: one of the strongest books yet to emerge from America's misadventure in Afghanistan."
--Kirkus (starred review)