My Creative Year in the Army

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A01=David Madden
ambition and escape memoir
American literary memoir
American war-era memoir
American writer's path
aspiring writer memoir
Author_David Madden
Cassandra Singing origins
Category=CBV
Category=DNC
Category=NHK
Cold War America
Cold War military memoir
Cold War service narrative
coming-of-age memoir
David Madden memoir
developing writer story
early life of David Madden
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
global travel memoir
international experiences Cold War
Knoxville in the 1950s
Knoxville writer
Korean War backdrop
Korean War era
life in the merchant marines
literary beginnings
merchant marines story
mid-20th century memoir
midcentury Knoxville history
military service memoir
poverty to publication
Tennessee literary figures
U.S. merchant marine history
writer in uniform
young author journey

Product details

  • ISBN 9798895271001
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: University of Tennessee Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In his new memoir, My Creative Year in the Army, David Madden tells a story of creativity and conflict.

In 1954 during the Korean Civil War, when nineteen-year-old Madden showed up at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, he set in motion a series of creative acts and conflicts, sometimes comic.

A romantic, an idealist, an agnostic, and a liberal, he had actively attacked racism, censorship, the death penalty, and tyranny.

During basic training, he befriended Rooks, a disturbed farm boy, and Jacob, the company's Jewish scapegoat.

When given an order, his response frequently was to ask, "Why?"

He refused to sign the loyalty oath that Senator Joseph McCarthy imposed upon the military, causing a prolonged investigation of him as a possible communist.

In a free-writing hour in Clerk Typist School, he wrote an essay on Jesus that shocked the officers of his regiment.

When someone stole his cartridge belt, he refused to obey a direct order to pay for another.

Madden includes lively letters to and from Iva Lee, his childhood sweetheart, Vera, his intellectual friend, Hope Savage, a bizarre Greenwich Village bohemian, his teachers, his many friends, his mother, and his two convict brothers.

David Madden's memoir will appeal to creative writers, veterans, and the general reader. When he entered the army, he had already created many stories, poems, plays, and nonfiction. In reading and in writing, his focus was on technique, style, and imagery. Throughout his Army ordeals, Madden worked on his first novel, Cassandra Singing.

A native of Knoxville, Tennessee, David Madden is the author of eighteen works of fiction. The Robert Penn Warren Professor Emeritus at Louisiana State University, he taught creative writing for almost sixty years.

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