If I had to use one word to describe this book, that one word would be: MORBID. Though, in all fairness, kinda hard not to be morbid when repeatedly writing about blast injuries, amputations, death or near-death in war, the long road to recovery...)
The second word I'd use to describe this book is: HEAVY, which is aptly already in the title. Several times over the last few days, when opening this book, I'd read a page, a half-a-page, a paragraph, and mention to my significant other, "I gotta stop reading this book." It's just... a lot. And maybe for someone like me, a veteran, I'm not the type of person who "needs" to read this book.
The third word I'd use to describe this book is: HOPEFUL, but a very hard-earned hope. People coming back from the brink of death—or who, considering the span of their wounds, are unremarkably not dead—and their bodies just in that chemical soup of inflammation; of how the pressure wave of a blast affects not only a limb or the brain, but the entire body; the hallucinations and combativeness of some of those coming out of anesthesia; finding themselves surrounded by teary-eyed family in a hospital room when they last remember being surrounded by their teammates fighting and shouting and sand...
I did find this book informative. It's particularly of value when Mayhew relays the stories told to her by, say, the soldier in the hospital bed, the medic at the forward surgical unit in Bastion, the plastic surgeon who specialized in repairing hands, the father of a wounded soldier who helped build a garden at Headley, a rehabilitative center in England specializing in teaching soldiers to walk again, prosthetics, pain management, etc.
I did question a few of the facts, such as when Mayhew mentions that the Chinook (the helicopter) is named after the Chinook salmon—I was like, no, that's wrong. US Army helicopters are named after American Indian tribes: Apache, Lakota, Chinook... not the fish. Sometimes I get the feeling that many authors, myself included, will google something or assume something and put that in their book without really knowing what we're talking about. *Sigh* google is making "experts" out of us all... Anyhoo, I didn't find too, too many instances of that in this book. Overall, I found it to be pretty well-researched.
The personal stories Mayhew relays are really the best part of this book. That said, I am relieved to be done reading it. Putting it on the shelf with my notes and scribbles in the margins and dog ears. To be taken down and referenced only in the case of ABSOLUTE NEED.