Roadside: My Journey to Iraq and the Long Road Home
A military memoir by a biracial child of refugees and survivors, Roadside is about life and death, about family lost and gained, and about America, as a dream and a reality. It’s about the roads one takes to leave home and find it again.

As a half-Black, half-Korean kid in Campbell, California, Dylan Park-Pettiford never really fit in, so he and his little brother Rory became joined at the hip. But after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, swept up in patriotism, Dylan enlisted in the US Air Force and was sent to Iraq, and the brothers were separated.

There Dylan’s days alternated between boredom and terror, and rare moments of levity and learning came thanks to an Iraqi boy named Brahim. Like Rory, Brahim was wise beyond his years, and he and Dylan bonded as much over rap music as about life. Over the following year, Dylan would bring Brahim food and toiletries to keep him going; Brahim would bring intel to keep Dylan and his friends alive. When they said goodbye at the end of Dylan’s tour of duty, he knew it was for the last time.

Or was it?

Dylan returned to a world that had moved on without him. He would go through a soul-crushing divorce, a bout of homelessness, and struggles with prescription drugs, alcohol, and his own mental health. Eventually, he caught a few breaks and overcame the odds—until the violence Dylan thought he’d left in the Middle East followed him home.

Just when his life was at its darkest, fate intervened again, but this time to orchestrate an impossible reunion. In a world marred by a seemingly endless wave of negativity, this story of love, loss, and brotherhood may offer a faint glimmer of hope as we face an uncertain future.
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Roadside: My Journey to Iraq and the Long Road Home
A military memoir by a biracial child of refugees and survivors, Roadside is about life and death, about family lost and gained, and about America, as a dream and a reality. It’s about the roads one takes to leave home and find it again.

As a half-Black, half-Korean kid in Campbell, California, Dylan Park-Pettiford never really fit in, so he and his little brother Rory became joined at the hip. But after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, swept up in patriotism, Dylan enlisted in the US Air Force and was sent to Iraq, and the brothers were separated.

There Dylan’s days alternated between boredom and terror, and rare moments of levity and learning came thanks to an Iraqi boy named Brahim. Like Rory, Brahim was wise beyond his years, and he and Dylan bonded as much over rap music as about life. Over the following year, Dylan would bring Brahim food and toiletries to keep him going; Brahim would bring intel to keep Dylan and his friends alive. When they said goodbye at the end of Dylan’s tour of duty, he knew it was for the last time.

Or was it?

Dylan returned to a world that had moved on without him. He would go through a soul-crushing divorce, a bout of homelessness, and struggles with prescription drugs, alcohol, and his own mental health. Eventually, he caught a few breaks and overcame the odds—until the violence Dylan thought he’d left in the Middle East followed him home.

Just when his life was at its darkest, fate intervened again, but this time to orchestrate an impossible reunion. In a world marred by a seemingly endless wave of negativity, this story of love, loss, and brotherhood may offer a faint glimmer of hope as we face an uncertain future.
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Roadside: My Journey to Iraq and the Long Road Home

Roadside: My Journey to Iraq and the Long Road Home

by Dylan Park-Pettiford
Roadside: My Journey to Iraq and the Long Road Home

Roadside: My Journey to Iraq and the Long Road Home

by Dylan Park-Pettiford

Hardcover

$28.99 
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Overview

A military memoir by a biracial child of refugees and survivors, Roadside is about life and death, about family lost and gained, and about America, as a dream and a reality. It’s about the roads one takes to leave home and find it again.

As a half-Black, half-Korean kid in Campbell, California, Dylan Park-Pettiford never really fit in, so he and his little brother Rory became joined at the hip. But after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, swept up in patriotism, Dylan enlisted in the US Air Force and was sent to Iraq, and the brothers were separated.

There Dylan’s days alternated between boredom and terror, and rare moments of levity and learning came thanks to an Iraqi boy named Brahim. Like Rory, Brahim was wise beyond his years, and he and Dylan bonded as much over rap music as about life. Over the following year, Dylan would bring Brahim food and toiletries to keep him going; Brahim would bring intel to keep Dylan and his friends alive. When they said goodbye at the end of Dylan’s tour of duty, he knew it was for the last time.

Or was it?

Dylan returned to a world that had moved on without him. He would go through a soul-crushing divorce, a bout of homelessness, and struggles with prescription drugs, alcohol, and his own mental health. Eventually, he caught a few breaks and overcame the odds—until the violence Dylan thought he’d left in the Middle East followed him home.

Just when his life was at its darkest, fate intervened again, but this time to orchestrate an impossible reunion. In a world marred by a seemingly endless wave of negativity, this story of love, loss, and brotherhood may offer a faint glimmer of hope as we face an uncertain future.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781641609777
Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 06/03/2025
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 310,747
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Dylan Park-Pettiford is a writer/director from the San Francisco Bay Area. His work includes writing for a forthcoming spinoff of the popular detective series, Bosch, the courtroom drama, All Rise, and for the Ron Howard-produced military comedy, 68 Whiskey. He’s a former AMC Network writing fellow and participant/mentor of the Writer’s Guild of America Veterans Writing Project. Dylan was a contributing author in the New York Times bestselling books The Moth Presents: Occasional Magic and How to Tell a Story. He’s also penned several Marvel comics. Following his military service, Dylan returned to school and received his BA in Film from Arizona State University before attending the University of Southern California for graduate school. He now calls Los Angeles home.

Table of Contents

Author’s Note

Prologue

Act I: Home

1. Tell Me When to Go

2. Semi-Charmed Life

3. Fortunate Son

4. Sweetheart Like You

5. When S(e)oul Meets Body

6. Strange Fruit Trees

7. To the Colors

8. The White Rabbit

9. You Can Call Me Al

Act II: Away

10. Around the World

11. Along the Watchtower

12. The Kids Are Not Alright

13. Home for Christmas

14. Thunderstruck

15. Don’t Start ’til You Get Enough

16. Rock the Casbah

17. Team Sleep

18. Coming Home

Act III: Somewhere In Between

19. Welcome Home

20. The National Anthem

21. Hello, Goodbye

22. Sun Devil

23. If You Gotta Go, Go Now

24. No Place Feels Like Home

25. Nostalgia, Ultra

26. The Funeral

27. Black Boxes

28. Hey, Brother

Epilogue

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