God Forgives, Brothers Don't
The Long March of Military Education and the Making of American Manhood
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Atria Books
Publishing:18th Jun '26
£20.00
This title is due to be published on 18th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

In the tradition of Sebastian Junger’s Tribe and Chris Hedges’s classic War Is a Force that Gives Us Meaning, a powerful investigation into the fraught history and ominous future of military education in the United States, and how it formed and fuels increasingly volatile strains of American masculinity.
“Send us your boy and we will return to you a man.”
Since the dawn of America, the military has articulated some version of this pledge, solidly staking its claim on the monumental work of building the American man.
When investigative reporter Jasper Craven first dug into Valley Forge Military Academy five years ago, he uncovered an acrid strain of masculinity that was raw, violent, fiercely hierarchical, and quickly mutating out of control. Initially, he had assumed that military education was a dying, outmoded brand. But as he looked deeper, he found a sprawling, well-funded network featuring dozens of military schools, like Valley Forge and West Point, plus thousands of ROTC programs in public colleges and high schools that allowed the Pentagon to wield outsized power on education.
In an unflinching narrative, Craven explores how the military has come to define American masculinity and how it often fosters its most toxic traits. Beginning with the American Revolution, Craven shows how the birth of our nation required a new masculine ideal, crafted in the image of George Washington. During the brutality of the Civil War, Craven traces the parallel violence in military hazing culture and the deeply prejudicial culture at places like West Point, which reared Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, and other famed Confederates.
The first and second World Wars escalated the need for battle-ready youth, and briefly resulted in a relatively noble male archetype, while the Cold War precipitated backlash, resentment, and trauma. This era also marked the beginning of the Christian right’s growing interest in military schools as upholding a patriarchal and fatalistic version of manhood. Vietnam and the antiwar movement fueled the rise of the “troubled teen” and the lying, lawless “operator,” embodied by graduates such as William Westmoreland and Oliver North.
As he chronicles the forever wars, Craven brings us up to today, where the military has...
“A searing deep dive [and a] unique and vital perspective on America’s masculinity crisis.”
—Publishers Weekly
"I could not put down Craven's unique take on modern American masculinity and its birth on our military drill fields and foreign battlefields. If you are interested in the lives of men and boys and how they now operate in the world, read this book."
—Anthony Swofford, author of Jarhead
"Jasper Craven demonstrates how our national cult of toxic masculinity was made, not born--at America's military service academies, from their gestation in 1802 in a country whose founders supposedly despised the idea of standing armies, all the way through a notorious military academy's role in shaping the dark heart of Donald J. Trump. And, unfortunately, beyond."
—Rick Perlstein, New York Times bestselling author of Nixonland and The Invisible Bridge
“Jasper Craven has produced a fascinating and barbed look at military education and American notions of manhood from the founding to the present day. God Forgives, Brothers Don’t doesn’t simply decry the long-running conflation of strength and cruelty, it makes a sharp argument for what true strength actually looks like.”
—Phil Klay, bestselling author of Redeployment
"Put Jasper Craven’s book on the shelf by John Steinbeck, Michael Herr and Sebastian Junger, the only civilians of the last century who’ve written as well or convincingly about the military. Craven is one of the few who can capture the foreign culture of the military without being captured by it."
—Matt Farwell, former Army infantryman and author of American Cipher: Bowe Bergdahl and the U.S. Tragedy in Afghanistan
“A lucid and fluent examination of how militaristic educational institutions like West Point, the Citadel, Valley Forge, ROTC, JROTC, and even the Boy Scouts warp and distort the psyches of men and boys, stamping out truly manly qualities like optimism, warmth, amity, honesty, and independence of mind, to create for the benefit of an immoral government obedient legions of servile and emotionally stunted hollow men afflicted by anger, shame, loneliness, and despair.”
—Seth Harp, NYT best-selling author of The Fort Bragg Cartel
ISBN: 9781668087190
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 23mm
Weight: 446g
352 pages