Photographer Raymond Jones doesn't come from a military family and had no previous personal experience with the singular rite of passage known as boot camp, by which ordinary citizens are turned into military instruments. Nevertheless, following a commercial assignment at Fort Benning, Georgia, he became fascinated by the questions of how and why-in post-Iraq and post-Afghanistan America-the modern army makes soldiers. The stunning photographs in Birth of a Warrior chronicle the transformation of 162 young men from across the country into U.S. Army Delta Company 2/47. From four in the morning until late at night, through arrival, processing, outfitting, marching, inspection, drill, physical training, combat training, and live-fire exercises, Jones documents an astonishing metamorphosis. Granted unprecedented access to the lives of these recruits and the NCOs responsible for their basic training, he photographs everything from their first haircuts to the tossing of their caps at graduation. Birth of a Warrior is both their story and our story: a profound look at the culture and humanity of those who we ask to go off to war.