The Things They Carried, the collection in which “How to Tell A True War Story” appears, received rave reviews from critics and readers alike when it appeared in 1990. Many of the stories in the collection, including “How To Tell A True War Story,” had previously won awards following publication in periodicals such as Esquire,…
Tag: The United States of America
How to Tell a True War Story: Setting
The Reagan Years: 1981-1988 In 1980 Ronald Reagan defeated Jimmy Carter for the presidency of the United States. Although the country could not yet know it, this was the year that the Gulf War really began, when Iraq invaded Iran. Because Iran held a group of Americans hostage, the United States initially favored Iraq in…
How to Tell a True War Story: Literary Devices
Point of View and Narration One of the most interesting, and perhaps troubling, aspects of the construction of “How to Tell a True War Story” is O’Brien’s choice to create a fictional, first-person narrator who also carries the name “Tim O’Brien.” Although the narrator remains unnamed in this particular story, other stories in the collection…
How to Tell a True War Story: Themes
Memory and Reminiscence Because “How to Tell a True War Story” is written by a Vietnam War veteran, and because Tim O’Brien has chosen to create a narrator with the same name as his own, mosl readers want to believe that the stories O’Brien tells are true and actually happened to him. There are several…
How to Tell a True War Story: Characters
Stink Harris Slink Harris has a very small role in this story, although he figures in other stories in The Things They Carried. Dave Jensen Dave Jensen is a minor character in this story, a fellow member of Tim’s platoon. Rat Kiley Ral Kiley is another member of Tim’s platoon. The story opens with Tim…
How to Tell a True War Story: Summary
“How to Tell a True War Story” by Tim O’Brien is not a story in the traditional sense. It does not follow a straight, chronological path from start to finish. Rather, it is a collection of small stories interspersed with instructions about “true” war stories. The story opens with the words,’ “This is true.” The…
The Harvest by Tomas Rivera: Analysis
Rivera’s “The Harvest” is a brief story, covering in some editions no more than three pages. However, springing up from this spare narrative are the archetypal themes of initiation and search, and one archetypal character, that of the Wise Old Man. These structural patterns are archetypal in the sense that they recur in many different…
The Harvest by Tomas Rivera: Setting
Chicano Migrant Workers Migrant workers are those who are employed on a temporary, often seasonal basis and who come from a community, state, or nation other than where they are temporarily employed. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the majority of migrant farm workers in the United States were recent immigrants from Asia or…
The Harvest by Tomas Rivera: Literary Devices
Structure In his introduction to “The Harvest,” Julian Olivares quotes from an unpublished manuscript in which Rivera commented on the construction of a short story: “The conflict or problem of each story is what interests us as a story. The more intriguing the conflict, the more the story will interest the reader.” This, says Rivera,…
The Harvest by Tomas Rivera: Themes
Materialism The young boys who speculate about Don Trine have a limited, materialistic vision of life. Although they work on the land, they have no real connection to it. This may be understandable since they are migrant workers often on the move, but it is clear that they can conceive value only in terms of…