Tim O Brien's The Things They Carried

Words: 1760
Pages: 8

There are not many instances in which authors talk directly to their readers in works of realistic fiction. They don’t make it a point to write a whole chapter on how they wrote the book and ask how the reader is feeling or what they would feel if they were put in the situation of the characters. Tim O’Brien writes his novels with numerous uses of metaphors, symbolism, and personification, all while telling different war stories that may or may not have been real. However, what evokes thought in the reader's mind is the specific choice to ask about their feelings and their thoughts as part of the book. How would they react to situations like these if they were put in the shoes of the soldiers? In the book, The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien …show more content…
He wants the reader to just try and grasp a fragment of his emotions and the memories that would have been running a million miles an hour through his brain. Trying to find solutions to this question that nobody should ever have to be asked. This is Tim O’Brien’s way of taking some of the weight of war off of his shoulders. He is dispersing the weight onto the reader at least as much as one can through writing. It is in this process that he allows for the words to be delicately chosen to allow the reader to experience the war and connect with him on the deepest level possible. Returning to the thought about O’Brien’s form of therapy, which for him is writing books, he wrote this book 20 years after he fought in the war. Adding onto this, even though Tim O’Brien only served one year in the war, he was still “going” to therapy 20 years after he went to war. He had been writing books after the war as his way of helping alleviate the weight by dispersing it onto others. However, even after all this time, he still needs therapy. War cannot be done and forgotten quickly by a lot of veterans, so often it sticks with them throughout their whole lives and they suffer from …show more content…
This choice makes the reader ponder whether anything in the book is true or not because there is now a connection between the fictional characters in the book as well as the author, Tim O’Brien. This impacts the readers because they don’t know what to believe or not to believe and whether any of the stories previously told are real. They were true war stories because they made the reader feel the emotional turmoil of war. This point further exemplifies the choice to break the fourth wall because Tim O’Brien is continuously making different connections with the readers through these choices he makes in the book. This includes directly addressing the reader through the use of the word “you”, through the characters in the book interacting with the reader, or literary choices that force the reader to wonder what in the book makes sense and actually took place. Readers have seen that with O’Brien’s application of breaking the fourth wall, storytelling is important in sharing our memories and thoughts to create a dynamic in which the reader can feel and attempt to understand the memories the author is trying to