
Submitted On
Updated On
Palmetto Associate
May 21, 2026
Jun 2, 2026
Natalie Brock
PO ID
PO-23011
The Soldier That Left
The Untold Story of Loose Change
Author:
Korey Rowe
Narrator:
Word Count:
Genre:
Category:
Narrator
40,208
Non Fiction
Biography
Male
Accents:
American
Voice tone:
Deep, weathered, clear
Performance:
Serious
SUMMARY
The Soldier That Left: The Untold Story of Loose Change is a raw and unflinching memoir by Korey Rowe, tracing his journey from soldier to fugitive to unlikely producer of one of the most controversial documentaries of all time. Beginning with his enlistment just before 9/11, Rowe recounts two brutal combat tours in Afghanistan and Iraq, where he witnessed the violence, futility, and corruption of America’s wars. Disillusioned by lies about weapons of mass destruction and trapped by a stop-loss order, Rowe faced a moral crossroads. Rather than return to Iraq, he chose desertion—a decision that branded him for life but preserved his conscience. On the run, Rowe reunited with his best friend Dylan Avery, who had been developing a film questioning the official story of 9/11. What began as a creative experiment evolved into Loose Change, a low-budget internet documentary that exploded into a global phenomenon. Hailed by Vanity Fair as “the first internet blockbuster,” the film spread virally through torrents, DVDs, and early video-sharing sites, igniting the 9/11 Truth Movement and forcing millions to question government narratives. Rowe’s memoir intertwines the behind-the-scenes story of Loose Change with his own battles—against the U.S. Army, addiction, media backlash, and his search for identity beyond the uniform. It is a story of dissent, friendship, and survival at the dawn of the digital age. Ultimately, Rowe reflects on the cost of speaking out, the burden of notoriety, and how a film made by a handful of young outsiders altered the conversation about truth, power, and history in the 21st century.
NOTES
40-60 age range, or just a deeper voice
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