Philip Caputo wrote, "This is the dawn of the wild indochina jungle both morally and geographically." This sense of emptiness provides adequate space for rejecting traditional religion, creating new interpretations, rituals, and creation. Please practice meaningless and cruel and difficult to handle. By the sly, savage, nihilism, soldiers can consciously separate the field of war and war from the "world", especially the etiquette and etiquette associated with it.
When I read Michael Herr's dispatch, there was overwhelming fear and fear. His schedule consisted of soldiers called "squeaking sounds" and their enemies were everywhere. Their map was blank, named 'Charlie' or 'VC' for their enemies, they said nothing. How do you recognize it? They are all wearing black pajamas; they are very strange for us. They are everywhere. This is where Paranoia starts. Mr. Her's infection was an obstacle because all the tensions and fears wrote in his nightmare that these young people made machines for murder. They do not worry about justice, morality, solidarity, and they are all over, so this is even more horrible. After all, who is where the enemy is, who knows it?
Last night about 1 AM I read an article by author Michael Herr when I was lying on the bed. After writing a book about Walter Winchel at Hull in 1990, I published it to the Los Angeles Times, but this book might have been adapted for movie broadcasting at HBO. However, nevertheless, he wrote this novel, the first book since "dispatch" in 1977 who made him famous. It was unbelievable to make the book about the book in those days, in particular war, famous, but American citizens must be a little stuck with this kind of thing. Like the cultural industry itself, I think that people are not impressed by it as it is now. Now, no one knows anything, if they are thinking about war, that is the moment they are watching a movie or watching something on TV. In general, there is nothing to tell anyone
I am a teenager and I am immersed in war literature as a young adult. My favorite works are almost always coming from reporters - dispatch of Michael Hull, words of a war reporter of one generation, memoir of photographer Robert Kappa, slightly out of focus, Ernie Pylele and AJ Libin's collection, John Lawrence porn's cat, Neil Sheehan's "Brightly shining lie", Philippe Capto's rumor (written as a soldier, later Capt became a war reporter), Joe Sacco's graphic novel , Any book by Lizaard Capuchinshi; "I miss it", his heroin addiction and coverage of the war in the Balkans, a description of Vasily Grossman's Russian Front, and many more