Featured New Authors
Featured Author: Tim O’Brien

Featured Author: Tim O’Brien
With News and Reviews From the Archives of The New York Times
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In This Feature
![]() Jerry Bauer/ Broadway Books |
Tim O’Brien |
(1973)
“. . . a beautiful, painful book, arousing pity and fear for the daily realities of a modern disaster.”
(1978)
“. . . combines a surface of realistic war reportage as fine as any in Michael Herr’s recent ‘Dispatches’ with a deeper feel . . . of the surrealistic effect war has on the daydreams and nightmares of the
combatants. To call ‘Going After Cacciato’ a novel about war is like calling ‘Moby Dick’ a novel about whales.”
(1985)
“I wish the novel could have been either more surreal or less. It falls into an untranscending middle which muffles the important cry of ‘Doom, doom.'”
(1990)
“. . . captures the war’s pulsating rhythms and nerve-racking dangers. . . . high up on the list of best fiction about any war.”
(1994)
“. . . striking new novel . . . about the moral effects of suppressing a true war story . . . a novel about the unforgivable uses of history, about what happens when you try to pretend that history no longer exists.”
(April 3, 1990)
The New York Times interviewed Tim O’Brien shortly before he returned to Vietnam for the first time since his service there.
(October 2, 1994)
For this New York Times Magazine article, O’Brien returned to the camp in Vietnam where he had served 25 years ago and finds it “utterly and forever erased from the earth. Nothing here but ghosts and wind.”
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