Tim O'Brien

937 Words2 Pages

Tim O’Brien is a well-known author who once said, “I didn't get into writing to make money or get famous or any of that. I got into it to hit hearts…” He did not become a writer for the fame or money, but to enrich the lives of others through his story telling. Most notably, in his short story collection, “The Things They Carried,” O’Brien tells of the Vietnam War focusing each story on various soldiers and the happenings of the war at the time. However, even though it is a collection of short stories, it is not one story with a beginning and an ending, but, rather, one story. It is perhaps the closest thing to listening to a soldier storyteller over an extended period of time. Moreover, through his work, “The Things They Carried,” O’Brien reveals to the reader the importance of storytelling and shares the accuracy of passing stories on to the next generation may be inconsistent, but it is still vital to keeping the memories of the past alive. In “The Things They Carried,” Tim O’Brien is telling stories about war and love and goodwill, yet he is also telling the reader the tales of other soldiers who sit around telling one another stories. For O’Brien, since he's a writer, he uses stories to process memories, and his memories are of war. This plays a crucial part into in his belief on how to tell a true war story: stories are based in memory, not in fact. Therefore, since his stories are his way of processing his memories of the war, we can assume that they are the soldiers' method of processing what they are going through as well. Stories can bring dead people back to life, if only for an hour or so, and they can also reflect the horror and beauty of everything the men go through on a daily basis while on the front. And for ... ... middle of paper ... ...ies cannot bring people back to life, but they are a way of preserving their memory. The act of Rat telling a story brings Curt Lemon back, if only for a little while. Those listening to the story feel like Curt Lemon is alive again. In this collection of stories, when something feels like is truer than the methodical truth of what happened, it is more memorable. In the end, a true war story is only as true as an untrained mind can understand. War is not a subject in which someone who has not experienced it could understand. However, Tim O’Brien stresses the importance of telling war stories, and stories in general, to keep the memories of the past alive. Although soldier died fighting, their memory lives on each and every time a story is told of their being. If not for stories, there would be no entertainment, but most importantly, no way of preserving the past.

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