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Peace Is a Shy Thing: The Life and Art of Tim O'Brien

Peace Is a Shy Thing: The Life and Art of Tim O'Brien

by Alex Vernon

St. Martin's Press ·2025 ·560 pages
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About This Book

The first literary biography of Tim O'Brien, the preeminent American writer of Vietnam War and one of the best writers of his generation, with never-before-seen materials and interviews."Vietnam made me a writer." —Tim O'BrienFeaturing over one hundred interviews with family, friends, peers, and others—not to mention Tim O'Brien himself—Peace is a Shy Thing provides a nearly day-by-day, gripping account of O'Brien's thirteen months as an infantryman in Vietnam and gives equal diligence to reconstructing O'Brien's writing process.Alex Vernon's comprehensive research uncovered countless gems about O'Brien's life and the journey that made him into a literary icon, including an unpublished short story about O'Brien from his college girlfriend, documentation of his comical involvement with the Washington Post's coverage of Watergate, and a 1989 attic exchange between American and Vietnamese writers on the eve of the publication of O'Brien's most beloved book, The Things They Carried, years before the two countries normalized relations. Peace is a Shy Thing is as much a history of the era as it is a story of O'Brien's life, from his small-town midwestern midcentury childhood, to winning the National Book Award and his status as literary elder statesman. A story which Vernon, a combat veteran of the Persian Gulf War and a literary scholar trained by officers and professors of the Vietnam era, is uniquely suited to cover.


Reviews

"This braiding of personal history and the creative journey poignantly finds O'Brien grappling with the perils of fame, masculinity, and war, while expanding the boundaries of storytelling."

Bill Kelly· Booklist Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Vernon sometimes makes the mistake of letting the research drive his narrative ..."

Scott Anderson· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"It's a hefty volume at over 500 pages, and Veron's plot summaries of O'Brien's novels are sometimes overly long."

Henry L. Carrigan, Jr.· BookPage Read review ↗ Near the Top

"A well-considered work of literary biography of a writer ranked among Hemingway and Crane as a chronicler of combat."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

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