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Reading
Terese Svoboda: Black Glasses Like Clark Kent

When

Sunday Mar 30 (4:30pm)

Where
Women & Children First Bookstore (5233 N Clark St, 773.769.9299)
Price
FREE
Details
http://www.womenandchildrenfirst.com/NASApp/store/IndexJsp?s=storeevents&eventId=370150
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Where US soldiers are now trained to recognize post-traumatic stress disorder and offered treatment to quell combat-related distress (in theory, anyway), military personnel during World War II were told one thing: get over it. In 1946, Don Svoboda was stationed in Japan overlooking prisoners, some of whom were secretly executed due to prison overcrowding. While Svoboda managed to bury these haunting memories for decades after the war, the 2004 Abu Ghraib atrocities prompted him to detail his experiences to his niece, writer Terese Svoboda, before taking his own life. This afternoon, Svoboda reads from her new memoir, which traces the emotional minefields of her uncle's past.

Suzanne Niemoth