What Is Tim O Brien's Reaction To The Things They Carried

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Personal Reaction

After reading chapters 17-22, a main theme I felt was guilt among the soldiers due to the death's they caused. Tim O'Brien expresses his sense of guilt many years later, when he tells the reader of his experience with death. "For instance, I want to tell you this: twenty years ago I watched a man die on a trail near the village of My Khe. I did not kill him. But I was present, you see, and my presence was guilt enough." His sense of guilt is so intense, he feels it twenty years later in the safety of his own home. He feels so guilty, he makes up a war story, because earlier in the book, he actually describes how he contributed to this same man's death. His friend, Kiowa, has to keep reassuring O'Brien that his actions …show more content…

Tim O'Brien especially expresses how he felt during a dire war situation. "For a long time I lay there all alone, listening to the battle, thinking I've been shot, I've been shot: all those Gene Autry movies I'd seen as a kid. In fact, I almost smiled, except then I started to think I might die." This quote helps contribute to the overall theme of the book because it demonstrates O'Brien's thought process in thinking he was about to die.

When Tim O'Brien's daughter, Kathleen, asks him if he's ever killed anyone, he originally responds no. This answer covers up a deeper and more personal conflict. O'Brien doesn't want to admit he caused another man's death. The insight this gives into O'Brien's character is his inability to completely confront his past. He is partially ashamed for what he has done to another human being.

An example of imagery used in chapter 22 is when Tim O'Brien is describing a Vietnam village along the China Sea. He states, "It was all wreckage. I remember the smell of burnt straw; I remember broken fences and torn-up trees and heaps of stone and brick and pottery. The place was deserted--no people, no animals--and the only confirmed kill was an old man who lay face-up near a pigpen at the center of the village." His vivid description allows me to see the village and all it's

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