July 30, 2011

S. Brian Willson and Jeff Paterson at St. Johns Bookseller on Wednesday, August 3rd

Wednesday, August 3rd, 7:30, St. Johns Bookseller, 8622 N. Lombard St.

S. Brian Willson and Jeff Paterson

Join us for this two-book launch party held to coincide with the Veterans For Peace Convention: http://www.vfpnationalconv​ention.org/ This event is FREE.

After serving in the Vietnam War, S. Brian Willson became a radical, nonviolent peace protester and pacifist, and this memoir details the drastic governmental and social change he has spent his life fighting for. Chronicling his personal struggle with a government he believes to be unjust, Willson sheds light on the various incarnations of his protests of the U.S. government, including the refusal to pay taxes, public fasting, and, most famously, public obstruction. On September 1, 1987, Willson was run over by a U.S. government munitions train during a nonviolent blocking action in which he expected to be removed from the tracks. Providing a full look into the tragic event, Willson, who lost his legs in the incident, discusses how the subsequent publicity propelled his cause toward the national consciousness. Now, 23 years later in BLOOD ON THE TRACKS, Willson tells his story of social injustice, nonviolent struggle, and the so-called American way of life.

ABOUT FACE contributor Jeff Paterson is project director of Courage To Resist, which channels support to persons in the uniformed services who take a stand of conscience against war. In ABOUT FACE, resisters describe in their own words the process they went through, from raw recruits to brave refusers. They speak about the brutality and appalling violence of war; the
constant dehumanizing of the enemy—and of our own soldiers—that begins in Basic Training; the demands that they ignore their own consciences and simply follow orders. They describe how their ideas about the justification for the current wars changed and how they came to oppose the policies and practices of the U.S. empire, and even war itself. Some of the refusers in this book served one or more tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, and returned with serious problems resulting from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Others heard such disturbing stories of violence from returning vets that they vowed not to go themselves. Still others were mistreated in one way or another and decided they’d had enough. Every one of them had the courage to say a resounding “NO!” The stories in this book provide an intimate, honest look at the personal transformation of each of these young people and at the same time constitute a powerful argument against militarization and endless war.

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