Reflections…The Things They Carried

  Reflections . . . on Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried: The perceptions posted on other participants’ blogs served as great inspiration for reply posting. With comparisons of The Things They Carried to the likes of Forrest Gump and The Hobbit, the influence of one work is put in conversation with other works. Written […]

Foot and Thumb

  Foot and Thumb Notes on Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried: One may note the powerful symbolism in the stories such as a rabbit’s foot, and a thumb removed from a Vietnamese corpse. Superstition and the spoils of war . . . the heavy weight of trying to survive, animal parts as good luck […]

Sequence: The Flashbacks They Recalled/Carried

  Sequence: The Flashbacks They Recalled/Carried Notes on Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried: The suggestion may be made that the novel humanizes the soldiers. They carried innocence and experience. They carried the good of their humanity in conflict with the evil of their ways required to survive. O’Brien humanizes the soldiers with their obsessions […]

The Haiku They Carried

  The Haiku They Carried (Haiku inspired by The Things They Carried (1990), Tim O’Brien)   2012.1.18 The things they carry Become the things that carry Them . . . own them . . . rule them . . .   2012.2.10 Cross, Bowker, Kiley, Sanders, Dobbins, Kiowa, Azar, O’Brien . . .   2012.3.15 […]

From the Heart…and Head…

  From the Heart…and Head… Sorry for laughing When you fell For I did not Realize you were hurt Nor did I know Your loathing for My humor from the heart… …and head…   2012.3.20   Apology poem inspired by: William Carlos Williams (1883-1963), “This is Just to Say” (1934)    

A Snap in the Wind

  A Snap in the Wind The sun is shining. Wind blows at eight miles an hour. A green fairway paves a path. A man sleeps beneath a crooked tree. Plastic bags whirl wildly in a twisting breeze. Birds fly, lose control in wind waves, and fly right again. Slinging rubber with and against wind, […]

Notes and Quotes – “The Ghost Soldiers”, “Night Life”, and “The Lives of the Dead”, Tim O’Brien

  Notes – “The Ghost Soldiers”, “Night Life”, and “The Lives of the Dead”: “The Ghost Soldiers” is a tale of revenge that becomes softened by rationale. The narrator contracts a case of “diaper rash” from enemy fire, and he nearly dies from shock as the inexperienced medic, Bobby Jorgenson, becomes too stunned to move […]