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Dispatches
Michael Herr
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Dispatches was praised by John le Carre as "the
best book I have ever read on men and war in our time." There is a masculine mystique
that revolves around wartime fear, bravery, foolhardiness. Can a war book equally engage
and disquiet all readers?
Michael Herr was journalist in Vietnam from 1967 to 1969. He alternated
among the troops in action, "shore leave" in Saigon or Danang, and occasional
visits to the States. Did he himself subscribe to the toughness, the cold-blooded killing?
Did one have to do so in order to stay sane? Herr quotes the song lyrics that felt
particularly poignant at the time Hendrix, the Stones, Bob Dylan and the
reader feels the futility, the stuckness. What choice did the "grunts," the
Marines doing the dirty work, actually have? The fatalism feels specifically of the late
1960s:
Something almost always went wrong somewhere, somehow. It was always something vague, unexplainable, tasting of bad fate, and the results were always brought down to their most basic element the dead Marine. ... And you knew that, sooner or later, if you went with them often enough, it would happen to you too.
Those who dont pose the question, "Why am I here?" have found
fulfillment in weapons, in killing, in hate.
Herr's writing is more a prose poem than a description or an
explanation of events. The language is crude, death never far away. He does not spare the
disgusting details, from bleak makeshift barracks to jungle decay to stumbling over
corpses.
Reading Dispatches in the wake of the 2003 Iraq war brings to
mind the relationship between Americas policy makers and the press thirty-five years
later. "They worked in the news media, for organizations that were ultimately
reverential towards the institutions involved: the Office of the President, the Military,
America at war and, most of all, the empty technology that characterized Vietnam."
Herr claims that only a small group of journalists were interested in discovering the real
story what it felt like to be there. They were accorded a warm welcome by the
soldiers out in the field, far away from the command structures. The soldiers implore them
to "tell it like it is," sure that the real story isnt getting through.
Why did the Vietnam war bring out a peculiarly sadistic streak in its
participants? Because it seemed so dehumanizingly pointless at the participants
level? Because they were so far geographically from the constraints of convention? Or did
the dehumanizing element come from above from the distance between the
Administrations ideology and the reality of the Vietnamese jungle? Herr brings up
these questions but doesn't answer them.
This is a book thats saturated with the subject of death
about fear of dying, about fatalistic acceptance, about the human corpse after life is
drained from it. Its not a book to like or savor. But it helps to sense the
complexity of what was going on in peoples heads at the time assassinations,
expressive rock music, the loss of faith in authority and why this war had such a
ravaging effect on the American psyche.
- Nancy
Chapple