Synopses & Reviews
Jimmy Stephens makes the worst mistake of his career as a gossip columnist when he wrongly accuses a big star of cheating on his wife. With lawsuits pending, Jimmy's imperious new editor blackmails him into taking the place of the paper's injured front-line war correspondent. Shipped off to the desert and embedded with a group of foulmouthed but fraternal Marines, Jimmy provides a bewildered but unfiltered view of the invasion of Iraq that is alternately hair-raising, hilarious, and heartbreaking.
Review
"Kulish's funny, engaging novel...gets it exactly right."
Hampton Sides, bestselling author of Ghost Soldiers
Review
"Compelling...Uses humor to illuminate the deadly absurdities of war...a deft command of tone from the slapstick to the tragic."
Kirkus Reviews
Review
"[U]nforgettable...so vivid, I feel like I've spent time in a Humvee with four marines heading for Baghdad."
Paulina Porizkova, author of A Model Summer
Review
"Told with wit and sympathy, sharply written and instantly engaging, it is a very funny book."
Arthur Phillips, author of Prague and Angelica
Review
"[A] passionate critique of modern warfare disguised as lad lit. This one'll sneak up on you. (Grade: A-)"
Entertainment Weekly
Review
"The author...has a pitch-perfect ear for the musical crudity of Marine banter."
Washington Post
Review
"[A] clever, affecting novel."
The New Yorker
Review
"Read Last One In...Nicholas Kulish's funny and heartbreaking look at life on the roads of Baghdad."
New York Post
Review
"...Kulish...has an excellent eye for the...details of Marine life...his dialogue has a great, Strangelove-ian snap."
Washington City Paper
Review
"[R]eadable and compelling satire...a good romp...that keeps the reader yearning...insightful commentary..."
Los Angeles Times Book Review
About the Author
In 2003, Nicholas Kulish was embedded with a Marine attack-helicopter squadron for the Wall Street Journal. He is an editorial writer at the New York Times and has also written for the Washington Post, Washington Monthly, and ESPN magazine. He lives in New York City.