In Harms Way by Doug Stanton,

Order Description In the war novel, In Harm's Way, by Doug Stanton, the nonfiction genre changes the story of the survivors by accountin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing for real world events, and direct accounts of said survivors, which consequently changes the emotion for an apathetic sympathy, for the characters, to a worldly empathy, with the people in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">involved in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in the story. How does the nonfiction genre change the story of the survivors in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in the war novel to be more impactful than if it was fiction? Does the nonfiction genre make the stories of these survivors through all there perils sound more heroin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ine?