“Kinder convincingly shows the stubborn persistence of American discourses about disabled soldiers despite the extraordinary variations in the wars that produced those soldiers. He resists unduly flattening things out—things do change as the wars change. But anyone following discourses about the disabled of post-9/11 wars will find much that is familiar, and much that is powerful, in this account.”
— Michael Sherry, Northwestern University
"For the wounded soldier, the shadow of war extends long after the shooting stops. By placing the disabled soldier at the center of the history of American warfare since the Civil War, John M. Kinder has provided a disturbing and important account of this country’s engagement with war."
— Jay Winter, Yale University
"We hear a lot about the 'human cost of war,' but Kinder’s book not only exposes us to its dismembering horror, but also asks us to follow disabled service-personnel back into the civilian world after the war, where they struggle to reinvent their lives. It is a compassionate account of terrible suffering, which many veterans don’t survive. The big question remains: why have we still not learnt the lesson of war?"
— Joanna Bourke, University of London
“Kinder has written a powerful and essential history of how disabled veterans came to be seen as a ‘problem.’ His unflinching accounts of battlefield injuries illuminate the social costs of war. The impact of disability—from Civil War amputations to World War I ‘shell shock’—was driven not only by changes over time in combat, but also by the way injuries were viewed at home. War injury was drawn upon in both pro- and anti-war political struggles, and scandals over veterans’ care periodically rocked Washington. Veterans organizations like the American Legion divided over whether veterans with disabilities needed paternal care or self-empowerment. Ultimately the ‘problem’ of disabled veterans went beyond the need for services. They embodied war’s ongoing impact, complicating cultural and political efforts to leave war behind. An important contribution.”
— Mary L. Dudziak, author of War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences
“Kinder mixes in sketches of well-known disabled veterans—including Harold Russell (WWII), Ron Kovic (the Vietnam War), and Tammy Duckworth (the Iraq War)—with bigger-picture issues involving the social and political impacts of veterans’ disabilities. It’s a well-written, though academically tinged, tome that illuminates the long-lasting human legacy of America’s wars.”
— Publishers Weekly
“An unflinching look at the true cost of battlefield bloodshed. . . The sheer excellence of the writing and Kinder’s reliance on factual vignettes . . . give the text a sensuous immediacy. Kinder shies away from war pornography, but he refuses to gloss over the gruesome effects of battle. . . I was left at the end of Paying with Their Bodies with the gnawing question implicit in the book: Is it worth it? What have we gained by our wars that counterbalances the monstrous death and disfigurement inflicted? At what point do war’s dividends of destroyed bodies and minds outweigh the gains? Kinder leaves us to answer these questions for ourselves.”
— Washington Independent Review of Books
“A valuable history. . . . Kinder’s concern is not the multiple problems of individual disabled vets, but the capitalized Problem they collectively present to U.S. policymakers. . . . Kinder focuses his book on World War I and hopes to elevate disabled veterans to the center of our thinking about warfare.”
— The Intercept
“Kinder shows that the war-disabled have always been exploited for political purposes by isolationists, pacifists or conservatives seeking to influence American foreign policy.”
— Times Literary Supplement
“Kinder offers an impressive analysis. . . . Although much of the book centers on the years surrounding WW I, which Kinder views as pivotal in terms of how Americans viewed and employed the disabling effects of war, it draws important and useful comparisons to current day events as well. Kinder’s work is a fascinating and much-needed addition not only to disability history, but also to the history of war and US society. Highly recommended.”
— Choice
“Since the founding of the United States, veterans’ disability has been a vital, contested component of the nation’s public policy, a repercussion of its long history of war. In this commendable monograph, Kinder examines the medical, fiscal, and social consequences of veterans’ disability and their impact upon American militarism. . . . Drawing from the disciplinary traditions of American studies, he introduces readers to an impressive array of vivid primary sources. Teachers will find a wealth of instructional material—novels, magazine articles, photographs, posters, radio programs, plays, films, monuments, holidays—in his pages.”
— Journal of American History
“Paying with Their Bodies is a rich and timely examination of veterans and the extraordinary price they paid in the form of dismembered limbs, shredded flesh, and chronic pains that traveled with them from the trenches of Europe to the farmsteads of the heartland of America.”
— American Historical Review
“Kinder’s book is a benchmark for the study of war and disability. It has as much to do with the rehabilitation of the soldiers as it does about the ongoing rehabilitation of American society. He articulates the social and cultural constructions of the disabled veteran with clarity and gives the reader a sense of what is at stake for contemporary society. Paying With Their Bodies is a must read for any scholar interested in the First World War, American society, and disability history.”
— 49th Parallel
“Paying with Their Bodies is a fascinating, elegantly written, and tightly argued book. What is more, it presents provocative arguments about the consequences of war.”
— H-Net Reviews
“Contrary to the hopeful predictions of the policymakers and their advisers who constructed the volunteer military, the civil–military divide has grown wider than at any other point in American history, at a time when America’s global military commitments have only grown larger. . . . Among his thoughtful, complicated answers to these questions, Kinder points to the relationship between the public and their military.”
— American Quarterly