This book examines the effects of combat stress on the family lives of past and present war veterans.
Over 100 Australians who served in Afghanistan have committed suicide since returning to civilian life. Partners and family members also suffer, in their shared lives with emotionally scarred war veterans.
Ex-service personnel and affected relatives provided author Ian Ferguson with fascinating first-hand information for the research of "Wars That Never End." Their confronting recollections surfaced in personal interviews, and sometimes in Diggers' letters and diary entries from front line battle fields, dating back to the Boer War.
Few publications candidly tackle the contentious issue of mental health among combat veterans, so this book is a must read for all discerning lovers of Australian war history.