<p><strong>The Military Chronicles</strong></p><p> <strong>Book 5 - The War at Home</strong></p><p>They've survived the firefights. The ambushes. The politics.</p><p> Now comes the hardest mission of all: getting home in one piece.</p><p>In <em>The Military Chronicles: Book Five</em> the final volume of the first arc Chino and Homeboy face their most unforgiving adversaries yet-time fatigue and the emotional aftermath of everything they've lived through. The sniper battles are over. The rotations are counting down. But the war in its own way is just getting started.</p><p>This isn't just about clearing one last building. It's about clearing your head. Finding meaning in the noise. And figuring out what to do when the only life you've known for years is suddenly behind you.</p><p>As the unit prepares to rotate out old tensions flare. Final missions are called. The sniper who haunted their deployment resurfaces. And the weight of years spent fighting begins to crush down all at once.</p><p>Across these pages you'll witness:</p><p> - A sniper's final reckoning with his mirrored rival</p><p> - A platoon unraveling under the weight of grief trauma and truth</p><p> - The real story behind the last mission-and why it's never as simple as going home</p><p> - A veteran's journey through guilt anger and the fragile process of reintegration</p><p> - Quiet acts of healing brotherhood and farewell that hit harder than gunfire</p><p>More introspective and emotionally precise than the volumes before it <em>The War at Home</em> is not about combat-it's about consequence. It's about honoring the ones who didn't make it. And it's about the complicated truth every service member learns: just because you left the battlefield doesn't mean the war is over.</p><p>Told in sharp steady prose with reverence for the truth and the people who carry it this final entry brings The Military Chronicles full circle. The series has never been about glory. It's been about memory survival and the deep unbreakable bond between those who stood shoulder to shoulder in the worst of it.</p><p><strong>For readers of <em>The Long Walk</em> <em>Fields of Fire</em> <em>Thank You for Your Service</em> and <em>War</em> this book is a quiet powerhouse-a war novel that understands the fight doesn't end with the last bullet.</strong></p><p>This is the last firefight.</p><p> The last goodbye.</p><p> The last lesson.</p><p>This is <strong>The War at Home</strong>.</p>