 Hi, this is Charles Finkley. I'm talking to you about this book today. I'm a professor in the School of Social Work and I'm also the Kurzweig Chair in Disaster Mental Health. All of this is to say that this is a great book, if I might say so. We've been working on this for five years, and we meaning Jeffrey Jarvis, who's a colonel in the Army, and Bruce Thyre, a friend, and former colleague at Florida State University, full professor. What we finally were able to do is to get 12, 13 actually combat social workers to talk about their experiences. What was it like being in the military, first and foremost, many of whom had just left graduate school? So what was that like? What was it like joining and then being assigned to go overseas as a combat social worker? What was it like for them to leave their family and head across the ocean? What was it like for them as they faced their own mortality? And also, what was it like taking care of all these soldiers, Marines, whoever they were assigned to take care of in the middle of combat? I think it's a remarkable set of a dozen combat social workers talking about their real world experiences. Now, when I'm not writing books, I'm a professor in the School of Social Work. I've been studying trauma for a very, very long time as well as stress and families in addition to that combat. And so I'm hoping you'll think about this book, not necessarily to buy it and go to the library. There should be several copies, I assure you. So hope to see you around campus. Bye.