New Books in History

David Nasaw, "The Wounded Generation: Coming Home After World War II" (Penguin, 2025)

Dec 16, 2025
Historian David Nasaw, author of The Wounded Generation, sheds light on the challenging realities facing World War II veterans upon their return home. He discusses the overlooked struggles with PTSD, misdiagnosis, and the societal pressures affecting both veterans and women who had taken on new roles during the war. Nasaw also explores the complexities of demobilization, the GI Bill's benefits and racial exclusions, and the long-lasting impact of trauma, revealing how the war's effects linger long after the fighting ends.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Family Return Story

  • David Nasaw describes his father's return from Eritrea as a traumatized, heavily sedated man who never spoke about the war.
  • His father died at 61 and the VA cited service-related disabilities, illustrating a personal thread that motivated the book.
INSIGHT

Wartime Psychiatric Discharges Were Massive

  • Nasaw reveals that by end of 1943 one million U.S. servicemen had been returned or discharged as ineffective, many for psychological reasons.
  • The military assumed recruits were psychologically fit but combat revealed widespread neuropsychological breakdowns.
ANECDOTE

Cigarette Camps And Chaotic Repatriation

  • Nasaw recounts the demobilization logistics: troops sent to French ports, held in 'cigarette camps' like Lucky Strike, then shipped home.
  • He describes disorder, rowdiness, and long waits that strained discipline before repatriation.
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