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Always a Marine
Always a Marine
Oct 3, 2024 5:19 AM

Author:Steven Preece

Always a Marine

In Amongst the Marines, Steven Preece vividly depicted his excessive, violent lifestyle as an elite Royal Marine Commando. Now Always a Marine covers the author's struggle to leave that lifestyle behind following his departure from the service.

Back on civvy street for the first time in over seven years, Preece finds it extremely difficult to adapt and struggles to shake off the belligerent mentality he developed while in the Marines. Despite these difficulties, he marries and starts a family, but this positive change is not enough to turn his life around.

Preece soon discovers that his tendency towards violence will not be tolerated in the civilian workplace and, after finding himself blacklisted by many companies in his area, he is forced to look for employment abroad. This quest for work takes Preece to France, where he is caught up in a hotel fire; Germany, where he is double-crossed out of his job and later teams up with an ex-SAS trooper; Morocco, where an incident lands him in jail and he is later shot at by border police; and Thailand, where he fights in a boxing ring with a former French Legionnaire and gets caught up in a business scam.

Having settled back in the UK, Preece's behaviour remains excessive. He severely injures his head and suffers minor brain damage after a heavy-drinking session. Upon recovering, he looks for something else to believe in and begins training in ninjutsu, the martial art of the ninjas, who view aggression as a sign of weakness. This, combined with the love of his family, finally enables him to put his past behind him.

Always a Marine is the action-packed, often shocking account of one ex-Marine's 13-year struggle to control the aggression he learnt as a serviceman in order to become a respectable civilian.

Reviews

Rated ****

—— Nuts

Candid, affectionate ... Johnston's unadorned prose style, blending tender personal recollection with just enough showbiz gossip to season the narrative, is like listening to her chatting to you over a cup of tea - ****

—— Michael Simkins , Mail on Sunday

Warm, fascinating but brutally honest memoir

—— Mirror

She lays bare the complicated and often difficult relationship she had with her mother with humour, warmth and honesty. Wonderful reading for mothers and daughters alike

—— Prima

Racily readable, humorous autobiography

—— Saga magazine

A book about love - ****

—— Sunday Express

This is a heart warming, unpretentious, beautifully written account of the relationship between two women ... Things I Couldn't Tell My Mother is a delightful, unselfishly composed read that goes just that bit deeper than most memoirs written ... a pleasure from start to finish

—— We Love Books

There are no heroes here - just real people whose bravely told stories could save lives

—— Betsy Lerner, author of Food and Loathing

Chilling

—— 4 Stars , Hot Stars

Gripping

—— Star

Powerful

—— The Sun
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