Sites 8
Bookreporter.com briefly profiles the author and offers an interview from 1998.
The pagination in this index is based on the paperback edition of "The Things They Carried," New York: Broadway, 1998.
Ken Lopez writes that O'Brien is widely recognized as the preeminent American novelist of the Vietnam experience and his novels have gained widespread critical and significant popular success because of their ability to translate the experience of wartime into perspectives on the largest questions of life and death. (1997)
A paper given by Lynn Wharton at a conference on National Identities, held at King Alfred College, Winchester, England, in September 1999. [.PDF]
Tim O'Brien's President's Lecture at Brown University, 21 April 1999.
Gadfly Magazine interview with Tim O'Brien by James Lindbloom.
(March 10, 1999)
Richard von Busack writes that in the novels of Tim O'Brien, all roads lead back to the Vietnam War.
(October 19, 1995)
This essay by Catherine Calloway appeared in Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. Calloway argues that "the stories become epistemological tools, multidimensional windows through which the war, the world, and the ways of telling a war story can be viewed from many different angles and visions."
(June 01, 1995)
A paper given by Lynn Wharton at a conference on National Identities, held at King Alfred College, Winchester, England, in September 1999. [.PDF]
Tim O'Brien's President's Lecture at Brown University, 21 April 1999.
Bookreporter.com briefly profiles the author and offers an interview from 1998.
Ken Lopez writes that O'Brien is widely recognized as the preeminent American novelist of the Vietnam experience and his novels have gained widespread critical and significant popular success because of their ability to translate the experience of wartime into perspectives on the largest questions of life and death. (1997)
The pagination in this index is based on the paperback edition of "The Things They Carried," New York: Broadway, 1998.
Gadfly Magazine interview with Tim O'Brien by James Lindbloom.
(March 10, 1999)
Richard von Busack writes that in the novels of Tim O'Brien, all roads lead back to the Vietnam War.
(October 19, 1995)
This essay by Catherine Calloway appeared in Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. Calloway argues that "the stories become epistemological tools, multidimensional windows through which the war, the world, and the ways of telling a war story can be viewed from many different angles and visions."
(June 01, 1995)