Keep rewriting until its perfect and employ an editor, any editor. Everyone makes typos and grammatical errors. I am no exception; it’s not a lack of skill or knowledge that’s to blame, just a tunnel vision that means glaring mistakes slip by.
Always carry a note-book and keep a pencil near your favorite seat. You never know when a new line or a great idea will present itself. Commit it to paper immediately, or it will be lost forever.
Be passionate about your subject and it will show, and that is a good thing!
I was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts, and the second oldest of seven children. Two of my brothers and one sister served in the US Armed Forces. My oldest brother Bob, served in the US Navy; my younger brother Howard served in the US Army, and my oldest sister Doris served in the US Navy. My father served with the US Merchant Marines during World War II. I was recruited by the US Army Security Agency in 1965. My assignments included Korea, Vietnam, Thailand, Germany, occupied West Berlin, and the US Army Security Agency’s headquarters at Arlington Hall Station, Arlington, Virginia. I earned the Army of Occupation Medal and was awarded the Legion of Merit Medal for my service in West Berlin. Because of my past assignments – and the hundreds of men I met along the way, I decided to write a book focused on the personal accounts of former veterans. These veterans served during World War II, the Cold War, Korean War, Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam War, the Korean DMZ Conflict also known as the Quiet War, and Operations Desert Storm and Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan).
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