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About The Book

About the Book

Invisible Wounds is a nonfiction work rooted in lived military service and the long aftermath that follows it. Written by a retired Navy hospital corpsman, the book examines what remains after duty ends and how veterans are often left to carry burdens that are rarely acknowledged, properly addressed, or fairly evaluated.


This book does not rely on theory or secondhand accounts. It is shaped by direct responsibility, clinical experience, and years spent inside institutions responsible for veteran care and benefits. Invisible Wounds explores how service-related harm extends beyond physical injury and how administrative processes, professional decisions, and organizational priorities can compound that harm over time.


Rather than focusing on spectacle or dramatization, the book emphasizes accountability. It looks closely at how systems function, where they fail, and why those failures matter. The narrative reflects on leadership, ethics, and the consequences of decisions made far from the individuals affected by them.


Invisible Wounds also addresses the transition from structured military life into civilian systems that often lack consistency or clarity. It highlights the emotional, professional, and medical challenges veterans face when support mechanisms fall short of their stated purpose. The book raises questions about responsibility, documentation, and the human cost of indifference.
Written with restraint and clarity, Invisible Wounds allows readers to draw their own conclusions. It is intended for veterans, families, healthcare professionals, and anyone seeking a deeper understanding of what service truly demands and what happens when those demands are ignored after the uniform is removed.