Author Tim O'Brien said that writing The Things They Carried "was a challenge I set for myself," one he likened to "creating a tennis net seven feet high" for a game of tennis. He said wanted to write something that "could've actually happened," something in which the narrator is Tim O'Brien and he wanted to fiction about the Vietnam War, which he described as a "small daily bunch of horrors, one after the other."
O'Brien, Friday's celebrity reader for Literary Lunches, talked about his work, including The Things They Carried, the selection for the Greater Grand Forks Big Read. The book, a suite of stories about the Vietnam War, in which narrator Tim O'Brien shows the reader glimpses of war. Though the characters are fictional----including the narrator-- O'Brien said that the characters are as real to him as the people in his own life. "Bodies don't have to be with us to be real."
If O'Brien had known what he was getting into, he said he might not have become a writer. Still, he finds "the payoffs of doing what I do...can be enormous." He spoke of one of those pay-offs in particular, a letter he got from a young Minneapolis woman, who wrote about how her parents weren't getting along and how painful it was to live in a household with such turmoil. Then, in an advanced placement English class she read The Things They Carried, a book which she gave to her father to read. Because he soon began to open up, she wrote O'Brien to say, "Thank you for getting a family talking."
Ultimately, O'Brien said he's trying to make art, to write something that will "entrance you...keep you reading."
He also talked about the importance of reading and what students should be reading. "Whatever gets you reading is okay."
He offered advice for young writers. "You don't have to go to war to write a book. If you have lived up to the age of thirteen, you have enough material to write a novel. You have known love, disappointment, betrayal.
"Pay attention to the life you're leading, and you'll have a wealth of stories."
O'Brien spoke at UND the night before and, during Literary Lunches, reiterated sentiments he shared there. If we want to respond to post-traumatic stress syndrome, we should "stop having wars."
The Things They Carried was a finalist for the 1990 Pulitzer Prize as well as the National Book Critics Circle Award.
The Big Read is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) designed to restore reading to the center of American culture.
Local sponsors include the University of North Dakota, the North Dakota Council on the Humanities, the Community Foundation of Grand Forks, East Grand Forks and Area, Red River Valley Writing Project, the Chester Fritz Library, Grand Forks Public Schools, Lake Agassiz Reading Council, Alerus Financial, Frandsen Bank and Trust, Friends of the Library, WDAZ and Clear Channel Radio. Grand Forks is one of 75 communities nationwide participating in The Big Read from September 2010-June 2011.
For a calendar of Greater Grand Forks Big Read events, click here.
(Photos of Tim O'Brien courtesy of Kris Arason )
Showing posts with label The Big Read in Grand Forks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Big Read in Grand Forks. Show all posts
Monday, October 18, 2010
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
The Big Read is on the horizon
"We are so pleased to host a Big Read in Grand Forks,” said Wendy Wendt, director of the Grand Forks Public Library. “Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried is a fictionalized memoir of an infantry soldier as his platoon trudges through the jungles of Vietnam. We chose this book because of its potential appeal to those who may not have a habit of reading books for recreation. We also thought the strong armed forces presence in the greater Grand Forks area would afford many community members a story in which they could identify – veterans, active duty military, and their family members. In addition, people who have never been personally affected by military service gain some small insight into the sacrifices made for this country by reading this book.”
Grand Forks Big Read community partners include the Grand Force Air Force Base, the Grand Forks Public School District, Northland Community College, and UND, which will be bringing the author, Tim O’Brien to the community on Oct. 14 and 15. Other community participants include the arts community, the Myra Museum, Turtle River State Park and many others. (text from University Letter, University of North Dakota Faculty/Staff Newsletter online)
Grand Forks Big Read community partners include the Grand Force Air Force Base, the Grand Forks Public School District, Northland Community College, and UND, which will be bringing the author, Tim O’Brien to the community on Oct. 14 and 15. Other community participants include the arts community, the Myra Museum, Turtle River State Park and many others. (text from University Letter, University of North Dakota Faculty/Staff Newsletter online)
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