@PotomacBobWhen I was a young paratrooper, based at Fort Bragg, I read a book: The Only War We Had (A Platoon Leader's Guide To Vietnam) the author kept a journal during his deployment to Vietnam. He also kept many of the letters written to him. Some 20 years later, as he prepared to retire from the US Army, he dug them out of an old footlocker.
It turned out his wife, parents, and older brother also kept all of the letters he sent them from Vietnam. (They expected him to be killed in combat, and feared each letter would be the last.) Much of what he wrote about resonates with me to this day. Numerous individuals he wrote about were senior officers on Fort Bragg, and I knew them. It was a fascinating perspective.
I can tell good stories, but I wasn't much of a writer in my teens and twenties. Attending college courses, and my duties required that I get better at writing. I also met several published authors, and performed some research for them. I was encouraged to write by them...
September 11th 2001, I got back in the armed forces. Before I deployed to combat, I decided to try to keep a journal. With mixed success. I wrote some, mostly I kept copies of records, and I have made some use of official transcripts. My own story is, for the most part, not that exciting. Although I do have some humorous anecdotes. I want to write about others I served alongside of.
Unfortunately, there have been difficulties obtaining needed verification and permissions.
So, I started writing military fiction and military science fiction. I am telling much of the stories I want to tell, but fictional characters and such.
I hope to eventually publish the stories of the fine men I served with. Until then, I am developing my abilities to write, via fictional stories.