From Baghdad with Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava


Posted on Mar 7, 2008 By Melissa Holbrook Pierson Comments(1)
The Lyons Press, 196 pages, $22.95

Available on Amazon.com

The story begins in Fallujah, in the first week of the U.S. invasion in 2004. It ends in California in 2005, but in terms of emotional expenditure, the year might as well be several lifetimes. That's because the story is about a stray puppy in bombed-out Iraq, and such things are not supposed to exist. Or not for long.

But because this one happened to be found by a Marine with as soft a heart as his exterior is hard, the puppy got a chance to survive. Too bad it almost killed the colonel.

None of this was supposed to make sense: first, that the puppy was alive; second, that he could be taken in by a battalion of Marines from Hawaii, known as the Lava Dogs, when it was strictly against military policy - plenty of dogs in Iraq met their ends from American bullets. And especially, third, that he could make it out of the country and to a new life with Kopelman in California.

It took at least a dozen people, all trying desperately against the odds. Some of them were Kopelman's own men; others included NPR reporter Anne Garrels; assorted Iraqis, most of whom are not fond of dogs; animal organizations in the States; and a bunch of brave, or crazy, or perverse (or all three) people. And the tale of how they got Lava, a shepherd-y mutt, out of the place where the lives of animals, including human ones, are cheaper than shrapnel is a nail-biter. The pages flew past as I could barely stand the suspense in the on-again, off-again progress of this heart-breakingly cute pup to safety.

The book is more than a story about a dog and the man who loves him; it is also a look inside the very paradox of war, the paradox of good people who are trained to become bad - to become killers of their fellow men - and the cost to them and to us all. A puppy like Lava intrudes on the statute by which soldiers must live: Have no compassion. This is something Kopelman understands well, and it makes his book a deep one.  

It is also, in places, a funny one: "Maybe this sounds selfish, but I don't want to die," he writes. The author's voice is immediate, brash, tough, and true. It brings you right into the heat of a very foreign, and dangerous, place. But it is Lava, for a dog is a dog is a dog no matter where he is found, who allows Kopelman to stay in touch with what makes him fundamentally human. That, it turns out, is to be someone who loves, and who is not afraid to do something about it, to risk everything. It was a risk worth taking. The photo of Lava drinking in life is proof. And so is this book. 
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Comments
This book is great! It reminds us of the hardships that our soldiers must face in defending our freedom, but it reminds us that they, too, are still human. Sometimes it takes the companionship of an animal for us to remember that. Continuing with this line of thought, I'd like to recommend FROM BAGHDAD TO AMERICA, the sequel, for those interested in the aftereffects of the war on our soldiers, particularly for Lt. Jay Kopelman and Lava. In the novel, Lt. Kopelman struggles with his return to civilian life, and seeks comfort in his relationship with Lava in order to overcome his debilitating mental trauma. This must-read for any families of returning soldiers is available now!
Posted By john
on Oct 30, 2008
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