Tim O Brien Character Analysis

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The novel The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien, and the novel Wonder by RJ Palacio both feature strong main characters who fight in wars, both literal, and metaphorical, these wars cause the characters to deal with hardship and grief at a young age. Many of the characters in The Things They Carry are related to the main character in Wonder, because of the way they try to hide their feelings from others. In both novels, there is a main character versus self conflict occurring. Although the novels share some similarities, they are actually quite different. The main character in The Things They Carried is a twenty-one year old man, Tim, who is drafted into the Vietnam War. The novel switches between present day Tim, and Tim’s time during …show more content…

One carries his girlfriend’s stockings around his neck, another carries a bible, and one carries comic books. The men do not like to seem vunerable, so they seldom show their emotions. Many things happen to the men while they serve in Vietnam, they are all completely traumatized, and incredibly paranoid. None of their families can comprehend what they are going through, and this upsets them greatly. One of the men, Rat Kiley, who is a medic, best friend dies in Vietnam, while there he writes a letter to his friends sister, to which she never replies. Rat is very angry, it is like when they are gone at war, they are forgotten at home. Rat had told Tim a story, he is unsure if it is true, because it is very unrealistic. Rat tells him about how a soldier brought his girlfriend to Vietnam. She arrives beautiful, but eventually gets torn apart by the hard aspects of the war, and completely disappears into the jungle. Tim also tells a few stories of his own personal experiences, like the time he a young Vietnamese soldier, he is devastated, and cannot shake the look on the man's face when he blew it up. He also tells a story of a young girl who is dancing on the ashes of her burned up town, none of the soldiers can get over how peculiar this is. Tim had always believed the war was wrong, and right after he had gotten a draft letter in the mail, he had tried to escape to Canada. He spent six days in a lodge, but believes his family and friends will judge him if he

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