Tim O’Brien
- In full:
- William Timothy O’Brien
- Also Known As:
- William Timothy O’Brien
- Awards And Honors:
- National Book Award
- Role In:
- Vietnam War
Tim O’Brien (born October 1, 1946, Austin, Minnesota, U.S.) is an American novelist noted for his writings about American soldiers in the Vietnam War. His best-known work is the novel The Things They Carried (1990).
Background and Vietnam War service
O’Brien was the son of a schoolteacher and an insurance salesman who had served in World War II. After studying political science at Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota (B.A., 1968), O’Brien was drafted into the U.S. Army. He had been opposed to the war and intended to go to Canada while in training in Washington. Instead, he returned to the army base out of fear, and the following year he was sent to fight in Vietnam.
(Read Britannica’s essay “War Stories: 13 Modern Writers Who Served in War.”)
During his tour of duty, he walked with his platoon to the village of My Lai, where a massacre of unarmed villagers by another platoon had occurred in March 1968, unbeknownst at the time to O’Brien and his fellow soldiers. In 1994 he would return to Vietnam, revisit My Lai, and write about his experience in a powerful essay for The New York Times called “The Vietnam in Me.”
Return from the war, journalism career, and early books
When he returned to the United States, he studied intermittently at Harvard University and worked for The Washington Post (1971–74) as an intern and reporter. He collected his newspaper and magazine articles about his war experiences in his first book, If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home (1973). By turns meditative and brutally realistic, it was praised for its honest portrayal of a soldier’s emotions.
The Vietnam War is present in many of O’Brien’s novels. One of the two protagonists in Northern Lights (1975) is a wounded war hero. Set in an isolated, snow-covered part of Minnesota during a disastrous cross-country ski trip, the novel is an examination of courage. Going After Cacciato (1978), which won a National Book Award, follows both a soldier who abandons his platoon in Vietnam to try to walk to Paris and a fellow infantryman who escapes the war’s horrors by inventing elaborate fantasies about his journey. However, he departed from this subject matter in The Nuclear Age (1981), which is about a man’s lifelong fear of dying from a nuclear bombing.
The Things They Carried and In the Lake of the Woods
O’Brien returned to the subject of the experiences and effects of the Vietnam War. In The Things They Carried, a fictional narrator named Tim O’Brien begins his memoir with a description of the items that the members of his platoon took to war, which range from physical objects, such as weapons and love letters, to emotions of terror and homesickness. The novel was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and the National Book Critics’ Circle Award. O’Brien followed up with In the Lake of the Woods (1994), which was named the best book of the year by Time magazine and won the Society of American Historians Prize for Historical Fiction (formerly called the James Fenimore Cooper Prize). However, O’Brien has said that after finishing the book, he nearly stopped writing due to a struggle with depression.
Other works
O’Brien’s writing took a new turn with the publication of Tomcat in Love (1999), a nuanced comic novel about the search for love, and July, July (2002), whose disillusioned characters gather for a college class reunion. In the nonfiction Dad’s Maybe Book (2019), O’Brien combines memoir with a discussion of parenting, including advice to his sons. In 2023 he published America Fantastica, his first novel in more than 20 years. It follows a disgraced journalist who is also a compulsive liar as he embarks on a crime spree across America in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Honors
O’Brien has been the recipient of various honors, including fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts and the Pritzker Military Library Literature Award for Lifetime Achievement in Military Writing (2013).