Bestselling author includes Landstuhl on his tour


The Installation Management Command – Europe Library Program is presenting critically acclaimed author Andrew Carroll as part of his “What’s Your Story?” tour, a series of discussions and readings planned at nine locations throughout Germany.

The tour is supported by IMCOM-Europe MWR and through the National Endowment for the Arts’ groundbreaking program – Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience – which has preserved stories of U.S. servicemembers and their families since 2004. 

Mr. Carroll, 38, is the editor of the New York Times best sellers “Behind the Lines” and “War Letters,” which was made into a PBS documentary. He is founder and director of the Legacy Project, a national, all-volunteer initiative that works to honor and remember U.S. servicemembers and veterans by preserving their wartime correspondence. His efforts have been profiled on “Oprah,” “NBC Nightly News,” FOX News, CNN, The History Channel, C-Span, National Public Radio, “CBS Sunday Morning,” “The Today Show,” “Good Morning America” and “Nightline.”

Mr. Carroll is also a regular columnist for World War II magazine.The “What’s Your Story?” tour includes stops at garrison libraries in Heidelberg, Wiesbaden, Stuttgart, Baumholder, Landstuhl, Schweinfurt, Bamberg and Grafenwöhr. His visit to Landstuhl Library will be at 7 p.m. Sept. 4. The events are free and open to U.S. servicemembers and their families.

***image1***Mr. Carroll will discuss his involvement with NEA’s Operation Homecoming, an unprecedented effort supported by Boeing Co. to send prominent writers to military installations, encouraging servicemembers and their families to write about their experiences and to share letters, e-mails, journals, short stories, poems and other writings.

To date, NEA has received more than 1,200 submissions, with approximately 100 of the most compelling works featured in the anthology “Operation Homecoming: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Home Front, in the Words of U.S. Troops and Their Families.” The anthology, edited by Mr. Carroll, received critical acclaim and inspired a 2008 Oscar-nominated documentary.

This year, the NEA’s Operation Homecoming program will host writing workshops for
veterans and active-duty troops at 25 VA medical centers, military hospitals and affiliated centers in communities throughout the United States.
At every stop, Mr. Carroll will discuss his on-going travels around the world – including treks to Iraq and Afghanistan – to seek out and preserve wartime correspondence for the Legacy Project.

“Nobody can tell stories about life in the military better than our troops and their families can,” Mr. Carroll said, “and I hope that Soldiers stationed at the bases I’ll be visiting will attend the events to help us spread the word about them as well. I know many servicemembers and their loved ones feel that the ‘real stories’ about our armed forces are not being told. This will be a great opportunity to share them.”

Mr. Carroll invites attendees to the “What’s Your Story?” programs to share their own writings. He will hand out the NEA booklet “Operation Homecoming: A Guide for Writers” and discuss writing tips for those who want to begin writing their wartime experiences.

For more information, contact Christina Kruger, European Regional Library Support Center, at 370-6678 or 06221-57-6678, or visit www.library.eur.army.mil.
For more information on Andrew Carroll and the NEA Operation Homecoming program, visit www.WarLetters.com or www.OperationHomecoming.gov.

(Courtesy of U.S. Army Installation Management Command, Europe Region)