The historical fiction book Vietnam: Walking Wounded by Chris Lynch follows the story of four friends who enlisted into different branches of the military to fight in the Vietnam War. The book follows the characters from the first four books but puts them all into one. The story follows after Rudi one of the four friends, is killed in battle and the story starts as Beck carries him to base. When Beck delivers the body to base Morris, another one of the friends, takes the job of escorting him home. The rest of the story follows as he makes stops around the world to take other fallen soldiers back home.…
This book by L.M. Elliott called Annie, Between the States, is about death, romance, and surviving. Annie is conflicted between what side of the war, she is on. She is also involved with some romance with the different sides. The author includes challenging situations and the feeling of losing a loved, to show how you would feel as if you were in the Civil War. Elliott shows how tough it could be.…
The Main Characters of the books are Charlie, A Soldier’s Heart and Henry, The Red Badge of Courage. Charlie and Henry have diverse feelings for the duration of the battles. Henry feels petrified during battle and deserts the rest of the men who were there fighting. Charlie was not afraid to fight, and fought the entire time.…
The Civil War is one of the most know American wars in history. The cause behind the war is the Northern resistance to Southern aggression on the topic of slavery, but slavery was a mere cover for the effects of western expansion, tariffs, and the South seceding from the Union and establishing their own government. These causes are depicted in many historical-fiction novels, particularly Michael Shaara’s novel. Michael Shaara’s The Killer Angels retells the Battle of Gettysburg through the perspectives of members of the Confederate Army and the Union Army; Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet, and Lewis Armistead represent the Confederate Army, and Joshua L. Chamberlain and John Buford represent the Union Army.…
The book I chose to read was For Cause & Comrades by James M. McPherson. McPherson is an American Civil War Historian, and is also the George Henry Davis '86 Professor Emeritus of United States History at Princeton University. He has written several books on the American Civil War and has received awards such as the 1989 Pulitzer Prize for Battle Cry of Freedom, and the Lincoln Prize in 1998 for his book For Cause & Comrades. McPherson was also the 2003 president of the American Historical Association, and is a member of the editorial board of Encyclopedia Britannica.…
What They Fought For 1861-1865. By, James M McPherson. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1994. Introduction, Chapters One – Three. $11.99. Paperback.)…
soldier's heart The book soldier's heart was a good book but I'm going to answer the question about was the war what Charley expected? Well he was really excited about being a part of the war. He was only 15 he lies about his age so he can enlist.charley's first war he watched many people die and he was certain he would not make it through the war.…
The Civil War was a devastating war that wiped out much of America’s population. The book written by James M. McPherson, What They Fought For 1861-1865, describes the views of the soldiers that fought in the war. McPherson uses letters left behind written by different civil war soldiers to portray a more round view of actions that took place on the battlegrounds. McPherson’s thesis does not present from both sides of the war what the soldiers, volunteers and enlisted men, of the Civil War had to faced, how they dealt with their emotions and experiences, the bond made between comrades, and how it affect their overall psychological, physical, and mental well-being of each combatant. This book contains diary entries from Union soldiers that were from the northern states.…
The Good Soldiers by David Finkel is a non-fiction account of the harsh realities of war. After reading this novel, it becomes clear that America as a country is truly blind to not only how difficult it is for soldiers at war to witness the moments in battle, but also the daily activities that maintain their ability to survive. Written with candor by the Washington Post journalist Finkel who spent 8 months with a group of Iraq war soldiers known as the 2-16, his honest and heartbreaking depiction of the trials and tribulations of war and the toll it took on these men both physically and mentally leaves readers heartbroken and emotionally scarred. In the novel, Finkel chooses not to write from the first person perspective even though he witnessed the events take place.…
Justin Dilks Professor Duinink LAS 110 1 October 2014 Wounded Warrior Project 9/11 was one of the most pivotal moments in U.S. history. History shows that when somebody threatens the liberty and freedom of the United States, the people come together. Historical events such as the Pearl Harbor and the Boston Massacre are examples of Americans coming together to defend what is rightfully theirs. 9/11 was one of these uniting moments in U.S. history. U.S. military enlistment increased drastically after the events of 9/11.…
This novel helps to teach about the truth that lies in war, whether or not one has experienced it firsthand themselves. This novel depicts the truth of awareness of mortality. According to O’Brien, telling stories is important because they join the past with the future and they last forever, even when someone forgets it, it’s still there. He uses the metaphor, “stories are for eternity, when memory is erased, when there is nothing to remember except the story” (O’Brien, 38). This states how a story is still there despite the fact that the person who told it is not.…
The Red Badge of Courage describes the struggles of Henry Fleming, the protagonist who yearns to fight in the Civil War. Although he originally joined the military because of his romanticization of war, he feels anxious and worried about the coming battle. Henry is thrust into his first battle, and is overcome by terror. Upon seeing the enemy advance, he decides to run away. The is leads to the main conflict: whether Henry's choice to run from the battles was right or wrong.…
The terrors of the Vietnam War has always frightened the people into hiding. Afraid of facing death in the eye or having your friend die in your arms. But what if there was more to the war then meets the eye? What if you were your own worst enemy? In the novel, Fallen Angels, Walter Dean Myers uses both the setting and time period to explore controversial topics.…
This shows how harmful the war was to the soldier’s psyche, where all feeling seemed to become more intense and cause them to act rashly and try and control their…
When stuck between fighting and fleeing, it can become difficult to choose. This is the main theme of the story “On The Rainy River”, written by Tim O’Brien, which recalls the events and struggles from when he was drafted to fight in the Vietnam War. Applying a biographical lens to Tim O’Brien’s “On The Rainy River” reveals the relationship between how the narrator’s story can relate to Tim O’Brien’s life. You can clearly see the similarities between his views on the war and his conclusion to return home and fight in Tim’s life and the story. It also allows you to not that Tim included the narrator’s job at a pig slaughterhouse when in real life, Tim did not work at any place like that.…