Why is chapter 3 called spin




















Azar gave the boy a chocolate candy bar. Azar pities the bar. The only reason the boy is alive is that the soldier ran out of ammo. You could put a fancy spin on it, you could make it dance. Jimmy has changed because he realized that his men and keeping his men safe were more important than Martha. He will be different because he no longer has any distractions and keeps his mind focused. Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Later that day, he packed up his things, drove home, reported to the draft board, and went to Vietnam.

I went to the war. Chapter four is perhaps the most interesting and readable section of the book. Within this conflict several ideas emerge. First and foremost among these is the nature of bravery. You place it in a trust, and it slowly amortizes until the critical day when you need to make a withdrawal. If you waste it on the small challenges, there is nothing left for the larger trials. His parents, his government, and the town of Worthington all expect him to do his duty to God and country by accepting his call to arms.

He hesitates to disappoint them. He calls himself a coward because he relented in his decision to go to Canada, and reports for the draft. But he is not saying that all soldiers were cowards and all draft dodgers courageous.

Clay's right - it's his little piece of revenge, his little bit of "sticking it to the man. It may just have been that sending letters to the draft board if you are drafted is free.

The men may have been instructed to right "free" on where the stamp should be since the army would pay for the mail. It would be like political ads are paid by the government. I think he was just being sarcastic and as a way of getting revenge. He was obviously upset that he was drafted, and he didn't think it was fair.

He may have just written free on the letter because thats how he feels how the draft has treated him, like he is free. Do you think that the war is making the group of men grow up or resort in becoming more of a child? I think they have to grow up, and that makes them want to be a child again. They're making decisions that are destroying property and lives, and it's very mentally taxing. It makes them want to revert back to a time where they didn't decide anything.

That's why their "horseplay" is similar to a child's, where they don't think about it, but it's a lot darker, because they're older and stupid kid's games don't satisfy anymore. I agree with Abby, they must grow up in order to became a good soldier. The author seemed to jump around a lot, from the different anecdotes, memories and time periods. O'Brien talks about himself during him time in Vietnam and then the next paragraph he is taking out his 43 year-old present self. The tone also seems to spin around a lot, as different stories bring him different emotions.

The story allows us to feel the boredom of war by describing the things that happen when nothing is happening: jibes, songs, stomachaches, and despair. It also addresses the way men choose to deal with fright, uncertainty, and devastation. We encounter most of the main characters in the title story, but we find out more about them here. We see the immature inhumanity of Azar, the philosophical even-headedness of Kiowa, and the dimness of Norman Bowker, and each character becomes more rounded and real with the revelation of a new detail.

She suggests that he write something happier, something entirely different, failing to realize that there is a reason that he needs to tell these stories, and to tell them to her, specifically.

His act of telling, which bridges the gap between past and present, helps both him and Kathleen more fully understand his war experience. Brave New World Dr. Jekyll and Mr.



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