In its duration, geographical reach, and ferocity, World War II was unprecedented, and the effects on those who fought it and their loved ones at home, immeasurable.
The veterans who returned home were not the ones who had left for war. “They are very different now,” wrote the GI cartoonist Bill Mauldin in Up Front, published in June 1945. “Don’t let anybody tell you they aren’t.... Some say the American soldier is the same clean-cut young man who left his home. They are wrong.”
Most returning veterans found it difficult, if not impossible, to get a full night’s sleep. Many were troubled by recurring nightmares and flashbacks. They were irritable, angry, plagued by uncontrollable rages, feelings of social isolation, and fears of places and events that evoked memories of the war, their proximity to death, and the dead left behind. Large numbers sought relief by drinking to excess, as they had during the war and while awaiting repatriation.