Lessons from Kate O'Brien's Spice Township Kate O'Brien's Spice Township is an excellent reading if the book's insects come from Catholic schools in particular. The contents of the story can be identified from the memory of a similar event, coupled with the girl 's quirkiness and lack of sister' s perseverance. The soft atmosphere of the nuns is far from the students, and it is only a short-tempered person in the school's classroom. After President Kennedy was shot in Dallas, Texas in sixth grader in the fall of 1963, the sister of the Dominican Republic saw her tears at school.
A story that has never happened may include more truth than a real event. Tim O'Brien introduces stories about continuous memories, individual events, observations, insights, and realism attempts in 'what you've brought.' These stories occurred during the Vietnam War, a collection of war stories he remembered when O'Brien entered the war. This novel is based on O'Brien's detailed emotional story. These stories are told by a variety of soldiers, which conveys the view that the story of actual war has little to do with what actually happened, but it is a basic discussion related to all meanings. When he tells the story, he is not bound by chronology, objectivity, even "truth". Therefore, the reader often wants to know what the real story is.
Tim O'Brien was born on October 1, 1946 in Austin, Minnesota and moved to Worthington, Minnesota at the age of ten. O'Brien participated in a series of anti-war demonstrations in his town and found a shelter from all over the world at the county library. After graduating with honors at the University of McAlester in Sao Paulo in 1968, after obtaining a bachelor's degree, O'Brien was elected war. Although O'Brien opposed the war in all respects, he broke up with his family and friends, but he knew that he would be alienated, so he let him escape from the draft and let him travel to Canada. Upon arrival, O'Brien noticed that shameful conduct of these acts was not worth it, and he realized that it was drafted at home. From January 1969 to March 1970, under the direction of Lieutenant Jimmy Cross, he was elected the fifth battalion of the US Army, and the 46th Infantry was used as an infantry.
If O'Brien escaped the draft, it would have been a sign of moral tenacity, it was not often the weakness that was often portrayed. O'Brien recognized this clearly when trying to escape to Canada. He knows that the motive behind the war is questionable and believes that "When a country wars war, it must have reasonable confidence in the need for justice and justice." In addition, O'Brien noticed that he was not suitable for war both physically and psychologically, and called himself "a person who was uneasy watching the blood ... unable to tolerate authority" (41). Participation in the US military is a betrayal of O'Brien's objective self-interest and recognition of the essence of his personality.
Tim O'Brien's collective soul as his archery nemesis in 'What They Carry' (2004) Papers by G. Stolyarov II