JIM FREDERICK was a contributing editor at Time magazine. He was previously a Time senior editor in London and, before that, the magazine's Tokyo bureau chief. He coauthored, with former Army Sergeant Charles Robert Jenkins, The Reluctant Communist: My Desertion, Court-Martial, and Forty-Year Imprisonment in North Korea.
"Riveting. . . A narrative that combines elements of 'In Cold
Blood' and 'Black Hawk Down' with a touch of 'Apocalypse Now' as it
builds toward its terrible climax....Frederick's extraordinary book
is a testament to a misconceived war, and to the ease with which
ordinary men, under certain conditions, can transform into
monsters. . . . Extraordinary."
-New York Times Book Review
"Meticulous. . . . Demands to be read."
-Washington Post
"Frederick, taking the story through to the surprising effect of
the beheadings, the conclusion of the war crime trials and the
impact that they had on the Iraqi relatives of the slain and the
members of Bravo Company, tells the complex story in raw,
compassionate and exact detail. Black Hearts should be
taught at West Point, Annapolis, and wherever else the styles and
consequences of combat leadership are studied."
-HuffingtonPost.com
"Gripping. . . . A model of extended reportage on a multifaceted
subject."
-Chicago Sun-Times
"Panoramic. . . . Gritty."
-Chicago Tribune
"BLACK HEARTS is a gripping account of a single incident involving
some of the most despicable actions by U.S. soldiers since the My
Lai massacre in Vietnam....It would be good for our nation and our
military if the examples of bad leadership exposed by Jim Frederick
in BLACK HEARTS become a subject of study in our military education
system."
-Military Review
"Black Hearts shows how a broken system broke its men. . . .
Engrossing and enraging, a chronology of combat and crime reported
with compassion."
-Army Times
"Every military leader should read Black Hearts. With
empathy and clear-eyed understanding, Frederick reveals why some
men fail in battle, and how others struggle to redeem themselves.
An absorbing, honest and instructive investigation into the nature
of leadership under stress."
-Bing West, author of The Village and The Strongest
Tribe
"Intense. . . . Fast-paced and highly detailed, this volume is
difficult to put down. "
-Publishers Weekly, starred review, "Pick of the Week"
"Frederick's...compassion for all parties involved has enabled him
to get an amount of cooperation from all of them that makes the
book an exceptionally rich and valuable document of an aspect of
the war the coverage of which is not always free from political
bias or just plain sloppiness."
-Booklist
"Harrowing account of the atmospherics, commission and aftermath of
a war crime. In March 2006, deployed in the south of Baghdad, the
1st Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division
faced a countryside in uproar. Arguably the most dangerous spot in
an extremely dangerous country, the Triangle of Death featured IEDs
that made every Humvee ride "an exercise in terror" and a civilian
population indistinguishable from the death-dealing armed militias.
With too few men to mount proper patrols and suicide car bombings
and videotaped beheadings circulating to instill an extra bit of
horror, every soldier had to endure constant stress and resist
hating the very people they were charged with protecting. Relying
on scores of interviews with soldiers and Iraqis, journals,
letters, classified reports and investigations, Frederick carefully
reconstructs the events that led to the breakdown of 1st Platoon,
Bravo Company, when four soldiers raped and killed an Iraqi girl
and murdered her family. War atrocities, of course, are as old as
Achilles' rage, and why particular soldiers succumb to madness and
surrender their honor, while others who have undergone the same
hardships don't, remains a mystery. Still, the author answers the
questions he can, plumbing 1st Platoon's psychological isolation, a
consequence of having three of their leaders killed in a two-week
period, the resulting disarray compounded by a leadership vacuum
and by constant, invidious comparisons by senior officers with
Bravo's other platoons. Their heightened sense of self-pity, the
belief that they faced unevenly distributed risks and the perceived
disrespect or indifference of high command-all these factors
created the conditions that led to an unspeakable crime. While
never absolving the four perpetrators of their individual
responsibility, Frederick makes clear that the atrocity had
identifiable antecedents and spreads blame much wider than four
out-of-control GIs. A riveting picture of life outside the wire in
Iraq, where '[y]ou tell a guy to go across a bridge, and within
five minutes he's dead.'"
-Kirkus Reviews, starred review
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