In San Quentin’s veterans’ group it doesn’t matter what you look like, all that matters is that you served.
2024 Writing Seminar for Incarcerated Veterans
At Six, He Stared Down the Muzzle of a Tank. In Prison, He Faced His Biggest Enemy
Navy veteran who lived through the 1967 Detroit Uprising confronts the choices he made that led to his incarceration at San Quentin.
The Berlin Wall Would Soon Tumble, Divided States Would Reunite. My Work Was Done.
During the Cold War in the 1980s, tanks and nuclear missiles crowded against the Iron Curtain needed a counterforce, the ground-launched cruise missile.
Leg Irons, Memories of Service, and What Might Have Been Echo From Behind Bars
Incarcerated Air Force Vietnam veteran serving life sentence ponders his military service during a prison transfer to San Quentin.
I Thought the Marine Corps Would Offer a Better Life. It Was Another Place I Didn’t Belong.
Essay: Incarcerated veteran hoped enlisting in the Marines as a young man would be an escape from street life, but his trauma only grew worse.
San Quentin Incarcerated Veterans Share ‘Proud, Poignant, and Painful Episodes’ during War Horse Writing Seminar
In a peaceful setting inside the chapel at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center, 18 members from Veterans Group San Quentin who served in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines gathered to reflect, assemble, and tell their stories at a four-day writing workshop. At the heart of the storytelling event, held exclusively for incarcerated veterans at […]
My Father Wasn’t Coming. It Was the Story of My Life.
I’m not using my relationship with my WWII veteran father as an excuse for my crimes. But after 46 years in prison, I’ve had a lot of time to reflect.
Each Episode in Life Is Just a Moment. Ten Years of Incarceration Is My Last.
Each episode in my life is remembered as just a moment. Finally, 10 years of incarceration is my last moment—but not my least moment.
I Became My Own Version of My Father. It Cost Me My Freedom.
Nothing changed. On the first and 15th, Dad’s paydays, he got drunk and didn’t pay the bills. Mom got mad. I grew to anticipate the fights that followed.
‘Giving Voice to Things I Stuffed Away’: The War Horse Brings Writing Seminar to Incarcerated Veterans Inside Walls of San Quentin
The War Horse hosted our seventh writing seminar in our most unique setting yet—inside the San Quentin Rehabilitation Center, formerly known as California’s San Quentin State Prison.
I Was an Air Force Fighter Pilot. Now I Help Addicts in Prison Turn Their Lives Upside Down.
It’s much simpler to just look down on addicts as vermin. I think I used to do that. It was a cheap way to improve my standing. Now I know better.

