The Veterans Breakfast Club (VBC) is the nation’s premier non-profit for connecting veterans with their fellow Americans through inspiring stories of service. We’re the place where veterans can share what they’ve seen and done—and where everyone can listen and learn.

Weekly Virtual Programs

Online storytelling programs for veterans and anyone interested in their stories from all over the USA.

In-Person
Veteran Events

Breakfasts and lunches around the USA where veterans, family, friends, and others meet to share their stories.

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Check Out Our Latest Quarterly VBC Magazine

In-depth veteran stories and history drawn from our VBC programs. You can check it out online or have it delivered in print.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Write Your Story: A Veterans Writing Workshop Series

Date: September 8, 2026
Time: 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Location: Zoom Only
Tuesdays, September 8, September 22, October 6, October 20, and October 27, 2026
7:00–8:30 pm ET
Events | Online Events
Writing workshop

Join the Veterans Breakfast Club, the Military Writers Society of America, and Blue Ear Books for a five-part Zoom-only workshop designed to help veterans, family members, military supporters, and aspiring writers tell their stories.

Whether you’re writing a memoir, family history, article, short story, or novel, experienced authors and workshop facilitators will guide you through character, setting, dialogue, plot, and the craft of storytelling. No prior writing experience is required.

The workshop meets on September 8, September 22, October 6, and October 20, with a special concluding session on October 27 led by publisher Ethan Casey of Blue Ear Books and editor Lisa Carrington Firmin. The final session will focus on editing, publishing, and next steps for writers who wish to share their work with a wider audience.

Participants are encouraged to attend all sessions, as the workshop is designed to build toward a completed story. Through writing exercises, discussion, examples, and feedback, attendees will develop the skills and confidence to tell meaningful stories drawn from military service, family history, community experiences, or imagination.

We hope that by the end of the series, participants will have developed a story they may wish to publish with the Veterans Breakfast Club or elsewhere.

SESSION SCHEDULE

Session 1 – Finding Your Story
Tuesday, September 8 • 7:00–8:30 pm ET

Instructor: Bob Doerr

The opening session introduces the fundamentals of storytelling and helps participants identify the stories they want to tell. Discussion will focus on point of view, narrative choices, and the challenges of transforming memories and ideas into compelling stories. Participants will complete writing exercises and examine examples of effective and ineffective storytelling.

Session 2 – Creating Memorable Characters and Settings
Tuesday, September 22 • 7:00–8:30 pm ET

Instructor: Ruth Crocker

Every story needs people and places readers can believe in. This session explores how writers develop characters, establish setting, and create vivid worlds that support their stories. Participants will complete guided exercises and discuss examples from published works.

Session 3 – Dialogue, Narration, and Story Structure
Tuesday, October 6 • 7:00–8:30 pm ET

Instructor: Valerie Ormond

This session examines the mechanics of storytelling: narration, dialogue, plot, and story arc. Participants will learn techniques for moving stories forward, creating tension, and engaging readers. Writing exercises and discussion will help participants apply these concepts to their own projects.

Session 4 – Participant Readings and Workshop Discussion
Tuesday, October 20 • 7:00–8:30 pm ET

Moderated by Shaun Hall with Valerie Ormond, Bob Doerr, Ethan Casey, and Lisa Carrington Firmin

Participants will have the opportunity to share excerpts from their work (up to five minutes each), receive encouragement and feedback, and discuss next steps in their writing journeys. This session serves as both a workshop and celebration of the stories developed during the series.

Session 5 – Editing, Publishing, and Next Steps
Tuesday, October 27 • 7:00–8:30 pm ET

Instructors: Ethan Casey and Lisa Carrington Firmin

What happens after you’ve written your story? This concluding session explores editing, revision, publishing options, and practical advice for writers seeking to share their work with readers. Participants will learn about traditional publishing, independent publishing, collaborative projects, and opportunities to contribute stories to future Veterans Breakfast Club publications.

INSTRUCTORS

Bob Doerr

Award-winning author Bob Doerr grew up in a military family, graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy, and served in the Air Force specializing in criminal investigations and counterintelligence. A full-time author with more than twenty published books, he is a former Military Writers Society of America Author of the Year and recipient of numerous literary awards. His novels draw upon decades of experience in intelligence, security, and international affairs.

Ruth Crocker

Ruth W. Crocker is an author, editor, playwright, and former healthcare executive. Her essays have appeared in numerous publications including The Gettysburg Review, The Saturday Evening Post, and O-Dark-Thirty. Her memoir, Those Who Remain: Remembrance and Reunion After War, received multiple national awards and was presented to President Barack Obama at the White House. She holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Bennington College and a PhD from the University of Connecticut.

Valerie Ormond

Valerie Ormond retired after a twenty-five-year career as a naval intelligence officer and founded Veteran Writing Services, LLC. She is the author of the award-winning Believing in Horses series and has published fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and journalism in a wide variety of venues. She serves as Vice President of the Military Writers Society of America and is a frequent speaker on writing and publishing.

Ethan Casey

Ethan Casey is founder and publisher of Blue Ear Books. Through publishing, editing, and mentoring writers, he has helped authors bring stories of military service, international affairs, and personal experience to wider audiences. He will lead the workshop’s concluding session on editing, publishing, and next steps for writers.

Lisa Carrington Firmin

Lisa Carrington Firmin is co-editor of the Veterans Book Initiative at Blue Ear Books. An experienced editor and publishing professional, she works with writers to refine manuscripts and prepare them for publication. She will discuss editing, revision, and publication opportunities available to emerging writers.

ABOUT OUR PARTNERS

Military Writers Society of America (MWSA)

The Military Writers Society of America is a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping military service members, veterans, their families, and supporters record history, explore the complexities of military life, and use writing as a form of education, reflection, and healing. Since 2015, MWSA has conducted writing workshops across the country and has supported hundreds of writers in sharing their stories.

Learn more: https://mwsadispatches.com

Blue Ear Books

Blue Ear Books is an independent publishing organization dedicated to helping writers develop, refine, and publish meaningful work. Through editing, mentoring, and publishing initiatives, Blue Ear Books helps authors bring important stories to readers.

Learn more: https://blueearbooks.com

The Military Response to JFK’s Assassination

Date: November 23, 2026
Time: 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Location: Zoom, Facebook, YouTube
Events | Online Events
JFK assassination

When President John F. Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, Americans mourned a fallen leader. But behind the scenes, the U.S. military launched a worldwide response that remains little known today.

Join the Veterans Breakfast Club for a conversation with researcher and former Marine officer John F. Davies, whose years of work in newly released government records and veterans’ accounts examines how the armed forces reacted during the tense hours and days following the assassination. Davies argues that military commands around the world were placed on heightened alert and that concerns about Soviet involvement created fears of a much wider international crisis.

We’ll explore what happened inside the Pentagon and overseas commands, hear from veterans who were serving at the time, and discuss how one of the most shocking events in American history intersected with the dangers of the Cold War.

This event is free and open to all. To join the conversation live on Zoom, please use this link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6402618738.

Or tune in on Facebook or YouTube at 7:00pm ET. Whether you have something to share or simply want to listen and learn, we welcome you to be part of the conversation!

Every Veteran Has a Story.
Hear Them Now.

GET INVOLVED TODAY

The mission of the Veterans Breakfast Club is to create communities of listening around veterans and their stories to ensure that this living history will never be forgotten.  We believe that through our work, people will be connected, educated, healed, and inspired.

Latest Blog Posts

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By Donn Nemchick The Veterans Breakfast Club is proud to congratulate our youngest VBC member, Henry Schoepke, on his graduation from high school in Wisconsin....
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Thank You Sponsors!

VBC programs connect and heal,
educate and inspire.
Everyone is always welcome.

The Veterans Breakfast Club (VBC) is the nation’s premier non-profit for connecting veterans with their fellow Americans through inspiring stories of service.

Our goal is to build a nation that understands and values the experiences of our military veterans so that every day is Veterans Day.

We do this by bringing together–in-person and online–men and women from all walks of life, all ages and eras, and every branch of service to talk about what they’ve seen and done. We want to hear how people’s military service has shaped them. “Every Veteran Has a Story” is our slogan. We want to hear every one.

We share the stories we hear in our weekly VBC Bulletin email newsletter and our quarterly VBC Magazine. We also record a weekly podcast, The Scuttlebutt, about military culture from the people who lived it.

We do all this because we believe the best way to thank a Veteran is to listen.

Listening is what the VBC has been doing for the past 15 years, when we held our first small event outside of Pittsburgh. Since then, we’ve held over 1,000 programs in-person and online and have welcomed over 20,000 different people at our events, Veterans and non-Veterans coming together to listen.

We value every veteran’s experience, no matter who they are or when or how they served. We’ve seen up close the power of storytelling, as the memories shared at VBC events connect, heal, educate, and inspire an ever-expanding circle of listeners.

THE SCUTTLEBUTT

Your weekly dose of veterans’ stories, military news, and the latest headlines, all in one place

Watch and listen to the Scuttlebutt, the VBC’s podcast dedicated to understanding military culture. Hosted by Shaun Hall, Director of Programming. New episode every Monday at 6AM ET.

THE VETERANS HISTORY PROJECT

Preserving veterans’ stories so that this living history is never forgotten.

We pair passionate VBC volunteers with military veterans for one-on-one oral history interviews over Zoom. If you are a veteran, or you know a veteran, who would be interested in sharing his or her story with us, let us know. If you are someone interested in conducting these interviews, please reach out!

At any given event, you might hear from the newest members of Space Force to a 101-year-old World War II veteran.

We’ve welcomed Tin Can Sailors and Montford Point Marines, Vietnam Sky Soldiers and Cold War intelligence officers. We’ve heard stories from the Horn of Africa to Antarctica, the Bering Sea to Diego Garcia, and all points in between.

LORAN Coast Guardsmen and Radar Station Airmen have told us about serving in some of the most remote places on earth.

Korean War veterans have borne witness to their “forgotten war.”

Other “forgotten warriors” shared their memories of Beirut, Grenada, and Mogadishu.

Some of the first women authorized for combat shared stories of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, and of the Purple Hearts they received.

Join us at our events and help keep these stories alive.

All you need to do is listen.