Showing posts with label The Things They Carried. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Things They Carried. Show all posts

Entry #7

"You are all a lost generation." -- Gertrude Stein

I had much less motivation to read this book than the Tim O'Brien novel. This novel has just been...well...boring. O'Brien has wonderful stories that are captivating [I mean, not everyone knows someone who died in a poop field...], and there is more depth to the plotline, while this novel follows the pattern of eat, drink, sleep, eat, drink, sleep with the occasional fight and bullfight in there.

I said this in a previous entry, but Hemingway is one heck of an articulate drunk. I feel like he was completely wasted while he was writing this novel, and yet he still makes it difficult to understand without truly paying attention to the words. I also noticed how they never have to use the restroom. Actually, I suppose I can't say that for a fact, but they never mention that they need to use the restroom. I mean, come on, that's bound to happen with how much they drink. They wake up every morning, find a pub, and drink. What a life they live. I guess that's what the starving artists of their time did as opposed to our starving artists today who sit around starbucks and drink coffee bemoaning their lives.

I absolutely love the quote at the beginning of the novel before the story even starts. The epigraph that Stein uses basically captures the essence of the "lost generation" stuck in a continuous cycle. Not one particular generation is "lost" so to speak, but they all are. Who actually knows what they want to do with their lives at every moment they live? It's difficult to figure out who you are let alone what you want to do for the rest of your life. You can ask anyone who is in this class actually...we're all doing just that right now. Woo cooolleeeggeee causes so much stressssss.

Entry #1 Well, here we go kids...

Sunday, June 6, 2010 7:17 PM Posted by Emily Looney 0 comments
Alright so since my past two blogs have been...well...pointless, I think I'm going to begin blogging about relevant topics.

I started The Things They Carried today, and while I'm not too far into it yet, I absolutely love it! I'm really happy to be able to say that because I haven't been able to say that about much of my required reading over the years.

Before work today I got through about half of the first chapter, and here is a quote that really stuck out to me,

`"They carried all they could bear, and then some, including a silent awe for the terrible power of the things they carried" [page 7].

That quote got to me. I read it over and over trying to imagine how it felt to carry so many destructive, life-altering weapons. What is it like to be able to control a person, a city, or even a country's outcome with just the pull of a trigger? Honestly, it scares the heck out of me, and it just increases my respect for the soldiers fighting for us.

The first chapter is titled "The Things They Carried," and I was pleasantly surprised to find that the majority of the first chapter is a series of lists (I love lists!!! :] ). The description O'Brien provides as the author speaking of Lieutenant Jimmy Cross' past is so thorough that the reader feels that he/she is more directly involved in the war effort. Not only were these soldiers carrying the weight of their weapons, but they were carrying the weight of their country, the safety of their families and loved ones, their pride and honor, and one anothers' lives. Talk about some heavy burdens to bear...

Well that's all for now!
I might even write more tonight! :]

Post Number 1.5

This post isn't really worth a full number because I just wanted to write something else on here. The current boring factor of my blog is making me depressed.

I have decided to finally begin reading my books that I have had sitting on my desk untouched for a few weeks. It's funny how I've already finished multiple books this summer, and yet required reading just makes me queasy. Just kidding. It won't be that bad--I'm actually looking forward to these books! :]

Okay so back to something relevant. I've chosen The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien to read first. Wish me luck!