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The Things They Carried By Tim O ' Brien

Satisfactory Essays

Classifying a book as “good” or “bad” has always been a subjective matter. One person may think that Laura Hillenbrand 's Unbroken is a work of art, but someone else may think it is a horribly boring book. However, when a book is considered a classic, it has specific characteristics that have stayed constant over the past hundreds of years. For me, a classic has complex and intentional use of language/structure; this complexity makes the book gain popularity in its own way. A classic has a universal theme, which means the theme pertains to everyone regardless of their background. It conveys the same ideas to people from all across our society. Lastly, a classic is timeless, which means it has transcended the time in which it was written. In Tim O’Brien’s novel, The Things They Carried, he offers a new, intriguing way to view war or just life in general and also meets all of the crucial requirements mentioned above to qualify it as a book of literary canon.
Though this book is technically a war novel, many people are attracted the authorial methods O’Brien employed to write the book and convey his meaning. As Robert Evans said, the novel is known “not only for the themes it explored, but also for the style it employed” (Critical Pluralism And Interpretations). The content (while interesting in it’s own manner) is not what has made this book gain popularity; it is the “part memoir, part short story sequence, part novel” (Evans, Robert) structure that O’Brien uses to convey

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