Marine Corps Gazette, July 2005 “If McCoy himself were the reviewer, I imagine he would judge this book faithful to the guidance he gave Koopman before the war.”
Los Angeles Times, Sept. 25, 2005 “In McCoy’s Marines: Darkside to Baghdad, San Francisco Chronicle reporter John Koopman inserts himself into the story, and much of the book is his account of the problems, joys and fears of being an embedded reporter during the Baghdad assault in 2003. Koopman, a former Marine, had either the good luck or foresight to attach himself to one of the Marine Corps’ go-for-broke characters: then-Lt. Col. Bryan McCoy, whose radio call sign was ‘Darkside.’ It was his battalion that fought in Al Cut and then toppled Hussein’s statue in Baghdad; not for nothing is he known by other Marines as ‘Killer’ McCoy.”
Follow Me (Second Marine Division newsletter), September 2005
“War, death, pathos, personal sacrifice, courage, bravery, leadership, charisma, history…these are but a few of the issues Koopman addresses in his gripping true account of ‘McCoy’s Marines’ in Iraq”