
Originally Posted by
Sancho
Hey, I own that book. I'd like to say I've read it, but I've only read some of the stories in it. And I've got to say Phil Klay has a real knack for getting to the heart of the matter. When he tells a story with the voice of a sergeant, a private, a soldier, or a Marine, I get the sense that I know that guy. I spent quite a few years in various branches of the military, you see. At any rate, I laughed out loud when I read the story told almost entirely in acronyms.
I think the comparisons between Klay and O'Brien are inevitable but unfair. Inevitable because they both have an Eastern College, Liberal Arts education, and unfair because that's about as far as the similarities go. There seems to be an infatuation by the literary establishment in this country whenever an Ivy Leaguer goes to war and then writes about it, perhaps because it's kinda rare. That said, I think O'Brien wrote his stuff a lot closer to the bone. He was drafted, and was a rifleman in an infantry platoon. Klay by contrast was commissioned and worked in the Public Affairs office. (O'Brien had his a*ss in the grass while Klay was in the rear with the gear < pure ripoff of Full Metal Jacket there) Anyway I think they are both fabulous writers, but I think Klay's strength is in his ability to crystalize an idea through somebody else, whereas O'Brien writes more from personal experience.