NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 04: A copy of "No Easy Day", an account of the killing of Osama Bin Laden on May 2, 2011 by the Navy SEALs who executed the mission, is viewed on the shelf of the bookstore Shakespeare and Company on September 4, 2012 in New York City. The controversial book by Mark Owen, a believed pen name for former SEAL Matt Bissonnette, was criticized d by the Pentagon for breaching nondisclosure agreements. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Photograph by: Spencer Platt , Getty Images
Some details are mundane: Terrorist leader Osama bin Laden wore a sleeveless white shirt and tan pants when he was shot and killed by U.S. navy SEALS, he used Just For Men to dye his beard, he was a neat freak. Other details seem significant, even troubling: the unarmed bin Laden was shot after peeking out from behind a door, a young girl — perhaps a daughter — was the first to identify him, and an American serviceman, lacking adequate space in a Black Hawk helicopter, was forced to sit on the dead man’s chest.
The memoir, written by Owen (a pseudonym, the author was later identified in media accounts as former Navy SEAL Matt Bissonnette), has attracted controversy and criticism for whether Owen revealed classified information and whether the 24-man SEAL Team Six conducted itself properly. But what’s missing is a reflection on the book’s strengths — a cast of characters, including Owen himself, artfully drawn, yet painfully human, passionate descriptions of a lifestyle that few are privy to, as well as its breathlessly paced, inexorable march toward an inevitable ending.
Owen wrote the book with co-author and former journalist Kevin Maurer in the year after 2011’s Operation Neptune Spear, which killed bin Laden at his family’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
The actual raid consumes only as many pages as it did minutes in real life — about 40 — but the rest of No Easy Day (its title is derived from SEAL philosophy: “The only easy day was yesterday) is anything but filler. Instead, it’s a remarkably intimate glimpse into what motivates men striving to join an elite fighting force like the SEALS — and what keeps them there.
Owen describes his childhood in Alaska and how he butted heads with his parents who wanted a college graduate, not a military enlistee (Owen got his bachelor’s degree before enlisting). He details the physically and mentally gruelling and near-constant training. And he doesn’t shirk from alluding to the failed relationships left behind.
Little more than a day after killing bin Laden, Owen found himself driving home in Virginia Beach, Va. His disorientation was acute.
He pulled into a Taco Bell drive-thru and ordered two crispy tacos, a bean burrito and a Pepsi.
The reality of the history he had helped create began to sink in.
“This was pretty cool. It was the kind of mission I’d read about in Alaska as a kid. It was history,” he writes. “But just as quickly as those thoughts crossed my mind, I forced them out. The second you stop and believe your own hype, you’ve lost.”