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dd 214

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A washed up soldier and his buddy take a road trip from California to Texas in a rental car full of guns and drugs. What could go wrong? Along the way, they encounter revolutionaries, survivalists, jailbait, and a bounty hunter. Their karmic journey across the American West is a search for wisdom and an escape from society, so long as they don't get caught.

246 pages, Paperback

Published October 6, 2020

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About the author

W. Joseph O'Connell

2 books10 followers
W. Joseph O'Connell is an American author who lives in Texas. He graduated from Pennsbury High School in Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania, in 1987. After high school he joined the U.S. Navy as a journalist, serving at duty stations in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; Argentia, Newfoundland; and aboard the USS Mount Whitney at Norfolk, Virginia.

After a 5-year enlistment in the Navy, he worked as a newspaper reporter in Texas until joining the U.S. Army in 2006. He served as an armor crewman with the 3rd Infantry Division during The Surge into Baghdad from 2007-08, and with the 1st Cavalry Division in Kirkuk, Iraq in 2010-11.

His favorite current writers include Bret Easton Ellis and Nelson DeMille.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Military Writers Society of America (MWSA).
821 reviews75 followers
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February 8, 2021
MWSA Review

A DD 214 is the Department of Defense form one receives upon separation or discharge from the US military. Most recipients also recognize it as a document signifying a significant change in their lives. W. Joseph O’Connell’s dd 214—rendered in lower case in the book’s title—is an entertaining and thought-provoking work of fiction. The book focuses on the very real and daunting challenges faced by someone retiring from the military and contemplating his future as a civilian.

dd 214’s two main characters are long-time friends who share the experience of military service. And as the main character approaches the end of his military career, the two decide to embark on a journey of celebration and discovery. As the story progresses, we learn that they’re clever enough to contemplate life’s oddities and challenges, honest enough to share life events like innocent teenagers, yet bold enough to set out on a series of short and potentially dangerous odysseys. All the while, they’re anesthetized by a near-constant buzz afforded by a never-ending supply of top-grade weed, or as the main character calls it, “the anamorphic filter of marijuana.” Perhaps this helps them remain oblivious to their shortcomings.

Through his first-person narration, we learn that the main character, whose name we never learn, has quite a resume. He ran a side “business,” allowing his fellow soldiers to cheat on their military drug tests while also selling them narcotics. During his road trip, he is willfully ignorant of his friend transporting drugs across state lines for sale and has few if any qualms about having sex with an under-aged girl. He also seems unconcerned about remaining detached from his children from a long-ago failed marriage. Still, despite the main character and his friend Zeke’s manifest flaws, the reader is captivated by their travails and ruminations—almost as if they were O’Connell’s versions of Butch and Sundance.

The main character is drawn to communist Cuba and upset about Agent Orange. He often voices contempt for a corrupt government typified by the “ATF goons” who intrude “against the rights of individuals and especially the Fourth Amendment” during the siege of the Branch Davidians in Waco. In response, he toys with becoming a revolutionary or maybe visiting the prison from which Timothy Leary escaped in 1970. At one point, he contemplates his future and imagines three possible outcomes: suicide or being locked up in either a jail or a “looney bin.” In the end, the reader won’t know his name or his fate. However, despite his many foibles, the author allows us to feel his pain and wish him well in his ongoing struggle with drug and alcohol abuse.

Review by John Cathcart (February 2021)
2 reviews
November 10, 2020
Great book. Very interesting. Had me just turning the page since I was so engrossed into the story of the situations the 2 main characters kept putting themselves into. Some by accident and others by being plain dumb. It's the cross between a dream and a nightmare type of book. I loved it.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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