'Julie Powell's transnational history of the wounds of wars is one of struggle and hope. She explores the ways war-wounded servicemen as well as their families, communities, and governments attempted to reintegrate disabled men back into civilian society. While acutely sensitive to national variations, Powell has powerful things to say not only about the bodily and emotional horrors of war, but also about the right to rehabilitation and the politics of sympathy.' Joanna Bourke, Birkbeck University of London