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When I fisted started reading The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien I half expected a narrative about his trials fighting the war in Vietnam. However, after reading Slaughter House Five I also partially expected a story with aliens. Yet, I did not expect the book to cause me to relate to the characters and story as much as I did. The chapter that affected me the most was “The Man I Killed” because I got emotional reading it. The brutal description of the dead man along with his dead hopes and dreams was very emotional. I was surprised with how O’Brien humanized the enemy and talked about his fears and emotions. Furthermore, O’Brien looks at how both men were driven to fight in the war not because they wanted to but because of the pressure put on them by society. Although originally my paper was going to be about Slaughter House Five, reading that chapter and the subsequent chapters drove me to write about O’Brien’s book. In his book, Tim O’Brien He talks about the effects of war on both sides in particular the man he killed. War is not black and white and therefore, the creation of roles of good and evil for the participants of war is unfair. However, most war books or films do not look at both sides of the story but instead try to demonize the enemy. However, O’Brien’s chapter “The Man I Killed” deeply moved me because he humanizes the enemy. Instead of distancing himself from the enemy he takes the reader into the thoughts and feelings of Tim O’Brien and the Vietnamese man that he kills. The honest yet gruesome description of the dead man surprised me because it was so sudden and raw. He mentions the specific visuals that he knows about the man but then he goes deeper and creates a backstory for the man. Therefore, the descript... ... middle of paper ... ...ooks exist because they live in books, our thoughts, and dreams. O’Brien’s book is a true war story because it is about “love and memory. It’s about sorrow.” (81) All the people that died in the war are being brought to life in his story. Many times in films and books, war is portrayed as being black and white with the good guys trying to defeat the evil villains. However, this is not a true indicator of the people fighting the war. O’Brien’s book shows a different side to the war by not dehumanizing the enemy. However, O’Brien paints a truer portrait of war because both sides were guilty of committing atrocities and both sides were victims. He touches the reader with a true description of war and its consequences for all the participants. This is a book that I will keep recommending to others because it is definitely a book that everyone should read at least once.

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