Brandon Lingle’s work appears widely in places like The New York Times, TIME, The North American Review, Guernica, Epiphany, Slate.com, National Geographic.com, Narrative, War, Literature & the Arts, Evergreen Review, and Mississippi Review. His essays are notables in The Best American Essays 2010 and 2013. Raised in Southern California, Brandon is an active-duty Air Force officer who’s served in Iraq and Afghanistan, taught in the English Department at the U.S. Air Force Academy, and currently lives in Northern California. He serves as Art Director and Nonfiction Editor of War, Literature & the Arts: An International Journal of the Humanities.
Jesse Goolsby
Jesse Goolsby is an Air Force officer and the author of the novel I’d Walk with My Friends If I Could Find Them (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), winner of the Florida Book Award for Fiction and long-listed for the Flaherty-Duncan First Novel Prize. His fiction and essays have appeared widely, to include The Literary Review, EPOCH, The Kenyon Review, Narrative Magazine, Salon, and Pleiades. He is the recipient of the Richard Bausch Short Story Prize, the John Gardner Memorial Award in Fiction, and fellowships from the Sewanee Writers’ Conference and the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and Sciences. His work has been listed as notable in both Best American Essays and Best American Short Stories, and selected for Best American Mystery Stories. He serves as Fiction Editor for the literary journal War, Literature & the Arts.
Goolsby holds an English degree from the United States Air Force Academy, a Masters degree in English from the University of Tennessee, and a PhD in English and Creative Writing from Florida State University. He was raised in Chester, California, and now lives in Tallahassee, Florida.
Adam Stone
Adam Stone is a retired Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant with 20 years of service including multiple combat tours in the middle east. He is married with four kids, and at the time of writing his piece, a freshman at San Diego City College. His work has appeared in Collateral.
Brooke King




Private First Class Brooke King served in the United States Army, deploying to Iraq in 2006 as a wheel vehicle mechanic, machine gunner, and recovery specialist. As a wife to a fellow veteran and mother to twin boys who were conceived in Iraq, Brooke began writing her unique experience down as a way to cope with PTSD, but found that her writing ability along with her combat experience gave her a distinct voice within the war genre. Since obtaining her Bachelors from Saint Leo University, Brooke has refocused her writing, bringing perspective and insight into the involvement of female soldiers in combat and war. Her work has been published in the, O Dark Thirty, War Literature and the Arts, Press 53’s fiction war anthology Home of the Brave: Somewhere in the Sand, University of Nebraska Press and Potomac’s “Red, White, and True” Anthology, as well as Prairie Schooner’s Winter 2013 Literary Magazine. Her chapbook, “Love in the Shape of a War Zone,” was released in October 2013 by Green Rabbit Press. Currently, Brooke is working on her memoir, Inscriptions From a Time When at War.
Kelli Hewlett
Writing teachers are always trying to get their students to start their stories as close to the action as possible. So it may seem counter-intuitive that we choose to begin a series about coming home from war with a veteran who never left the states during her enlistment, but here’s why we think Specialist Kelli Hewlett is the perfect introduction to this collection:
Civilian America doesn’t experience war except through it’s aftermath; through documentation, stories, and the chance encounter with veterans. As an Army nurse in-training at Walter Reed Hospital, Kelli experienced the wars through their casualties, but unlike a civilian, she couldn’t look away. Her duty mandated that she face the most jarring and horrific injuries–physical and psychological–suffered in conflict head-on while caring for those wounds, and the guilt, self-doubt, and confusion she stuffed down in doing so echo the discomfort felt by many Americans at their relationship with their all-volunteer armed forces.
Kelli was never in a firefight, or targeted by mortars, or blown up by an IED, but she was witness to the echos of all that and more, and so we start with her and her story, “Beyond the Lines,” in Episode 1 of Incoming.
Kelli Hewlett is a Registered Nurse finishing her Bachelor’s degree in nursing at San Diego State University. She was born into a military family at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, where she started her own army career 18 years later. She got her start in health care as a Licensed Practical Nurse and fell in love with the profession and efforts to assist the public. For her work in aiding the community she has received a Certificate of Recognition from California State Senator Joel Anderson.
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