The novel reveals the truth. "Artists lie to say fruit" (V stands for Vendetta). This sentence may be related to any storytelling such as movies, poetry, novels. The author and the creator of such a story are lying to tell the truth. Regardless of how great I am in the voice of that person, the same story may be irrelevant to others, making it uncomfortable to see and read. When the reader gets a book, the story explains vaguely what happened. Or does the author show the details of each page?
Tim O'Brien treats the ambiguity of this fact in various ways. He uses the truth in his novel to make the story more reliable. The central character and narrator of 'what they carry' is called Tim O'Brien (like the author), Harvard graduate, a 40-year-old Vietnam war veterinarian, now a writer. (As a writer), and published a book called "Going After Cacciato" (as well as a writer). The reader is encouraged to associate the narrator with the author in order to ask what is correct. Clearly these are not just "details". The difference between Tim O'Brien and the character Tim O'Brien is that it is difficult to balance readers, and in the end it will question dubious and reality things. O'Brien said once, "I hope that you can feel my feelings, I want you to know why the story is more real than the truth" (203)
Tim O'Brien blurs this fact in various ways. He uses the truth in his novel to make the story more reliable. The hero and the talker of what they carry are named Tim O'Brien, also from Tim O'Brien, a Minnesota town author. This role is a veterinarian of the Vietnamese war who graduated from college and was drafted. He is over 40 years old and he is a writer who published the book "Chasing Kasiato". These are obviously not part of the details the character shares with real O'Brien. The purpose of the author is to make the readers feel and do what they did. Because I want the reader to know why the story is more real than the truth (O'Brien 203), the reader needs to try to connect the relationship between the narrator and the author. It's a fictional question.