While most soldiers consider family pictures and cigarettes to be some of the most valuable things one can have while on tour, Afghanistan veteran and Fairfield alumnus Colin Halloran ’12 said he couldn’t live on the battlefield without his collection of books.

Halloran, who has published a new book of war poems titled “Shortly Thereafter,” said that’s one of the reasons why he was “not your typical grunt,” a line featured in one of his poems titled “Footlocker.”

Halloran served as a U.S. Army soldier fighting in Afghanistan in 2006, and he read several poems from his book aloud to an audience gathered at the Fairfield University Bookstore last Friday night.

He explained that the poems were based on the experiences and memories he gathered when he was fighting overseas and how they impacted him once he returned home.

The topics of the poems range from the sardonically comical account of nicknames people used to call him to the sad reality of sitting through a boring college class after a soldier has returned home but knows there are soldiers still out there fighting.

Before Halloran took to the podium to read aloud from his book, Dr. Michael White, program director of Fairfield University’s MFA in creative writing and a personal friend of Halloran, stood before the audience and introduced him.

“I think he’s a wonderful poet, very mature,” White said. “He has developed a great deal.”

According to White, the men met for the first time about four years ago in a small coffee shop in Durham where they talked about poetry, the war in Afghanistan and Halloran’s interest in pursuing a creative writing degree. One year later, Halloran enrolled in Fairfield’s creative writing program and proceeded to study under White.

While at Fairfield, Halloran worked on several of the poems featured in “Shortly Thereafter” and used most of them in his thesis.

When asked what was the most valuable skill he learned from working with the Fairfield creative writing program, he said: “Figuring out my voice.”

“As a writer, you have to know where you’re writing from, not just what you’re writing about,” said Halloran. “Through workshopping and close work with mentors and countless drafts, I was able to kind of peel back the layers and get to that core of who I was.”

Although the book was only released on Oct. 12, it has already garnered some public attention and critical acclaim. So far, the book has been recognized for winning the 2012 Main Street Rag Poetry Book Award.

In addition to writing poetry, Halloran also spends time traveling to schools throughout the Northeast, where he works with students and teachers to teach about the benefits of using literature in history classes, as well as how to analyze the ways in which poetry can inform various portrayals of war.

When asked about her thoughts on the book reading, Brigitte Duffy, a friend and colleague of Halloran through the MFA program, said, “I was impressed by his depth of emotion and the way he described his experiences.”

During a question and answer session, a member of the audience asked why he chose poetry as his medium.

Halloran replied, “Poetry gets down to the bare-bone essence of what you’ve been through … it is able to access that kind of emotional pull you experience and boil it down. That’s what I try to do.”

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