Alive Day A memoir

Karie Fugett

Book - 2025

"Karie Fugett is living out of her car in a Kmart parking lot when her boyfriend Cleve suggests "Maybe we could get married or somethin'." Karie says yes out of love, but also out of convenience. As a twenty-year-old high school dropout who ran away from her family and recently lost her job, Karie has nowhere else to turn. Just months after they elope, Cleve's Marine unit is deployed to Iraq. Then Karie gets the call: Cleve's Humvee has been hit by an IED, and he's suffered severe injuries. Karie rushes to Walter Reed, where she's told it's a miracle that her husband has survived. "Happy Alive Day, man," a fellow vet says to Cleve, explaining that the date will always be marked as the d...ay he was given a second chance at life. Newlyweds barely out of their teens, Karie and Cleve are thrust into utterly foreign roles. Karie tries to adapt to her job as a caregiver, navigating the labyrinthine system of veterans affairs, hospital bureaucracy, and doctors who do little more than shrug when she raises concerns about Cleve's dependency on painkillers. It is clear to Karie that Cleve is using opiates to dull a pain that is more than physical. She catches his first overdose, but what if she can't save him a second time? Will she still be able to save herself? Fugett's story depicts an oft-overlooked reality of war: the experience of the many thousands of caregivers and spouses--mostly women, mostly young, mostly poor--whose lives have been shattered by battles fought against enemies abroad and against addiction at home. Tender, vivid, and laced with dark humor, Alive Day is at once an epic and engrossing love story, a testament to the resilience of the human spirit, and a powerful indictment of the sins of a nation"--

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  • Prologue
  • 1. The American Dream
  • 2. The Ones Who Would Fight
  • 3. Soulmates
  • 4. Unusual Objects
  • 5. Alive Day
  • 6. Hospital Life
  • 7. Uphill from Here
  • 8. Fucking Lisa
  • 9. Landslide
  • 10. Ride or Die
  • 11. Just Kids
  • 12. Welcome to the Club
  • 13. Chicken
  • 14. Hero Treatment
  • 15. Problem Child
  • 16. Good Wife
  • 17. Medical Retirement
  • 18. Two of Us
  • 19. Don't Leave Me Here Alone
  • 20. American Nightmare
  • 21. Every Good and Terrible Thing
  • 22. Forever Changed Landscape
  • 23. The Widows
  • 24. It Took All Three of Us
  • 25. Find Him Near Water
  • 26. Home
  • Author's Note
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A harrowing account of a military spouse's tragic journey. With plainspoken, precise prose, Fugett narrates her own improbable journey alongside that of her childhood crush-turned-husband, Cleve: "Young, poor, we followed the breadcrumbs we found, and they led us to the Marine Corps." As her own family fragmented, in Alabama, she reconnected with Cleve at age 20, startled by his transformation into a combat veteran: "The prospect of a second chance thrilled me. I believed in soulmates, and I couldn't help but wonder if Cleve was mine." They married impulsively (and, like many soldiers, from economic need). Cleve was grievously wounded by an IED three weeks into his second deployment. She notes that the titular day for today's veterans marks "the day they almost died at war but survived.…I wondered what Cleve's alive day meant for me." Thus begins a grim odyssey, captured unsparingly, beginning with the amputation of Cleve's lower leg following difficult surgeries to preserve it. Grueling stretches of rehabilitation prior to Cleve's official medical retirement taught her that "the military relies on young spouses like me as cheap--sometimes free--labor." Then, overprescribed opioids, a lack of therapeutic options, and bureaucratic torpor lengthened the odds for recovery: "It was easy to pretend that whatever was happening to Cleve was normal, because it seemed like everyone at Walter Reed was struggling with dependence on their medications." Although her story concludes with a glimmer of hope, Cleve's horrific wounding and subsequent mismanaged care clearly mirror the trials of many military families. A sharp, moving memoir debut with unsettling implications about national service. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.