Skip to main content

Generation Kill by Evan Wright and One Bullet Away by Nathaniel Fick


Non-fiction books aren't really my thing; generally, this is how my relationship goes with non-fiction books: I see a really interesting one, I borrow it, I start to read it, and then I ditch it a chapter or two later when the dry, boring writing and non-existent plot fail to hook me. However, this a review of two non-fiction books that I read back to back after a five year old three article series that I dug up on the internet; it was written by Evan Wright and preceded his book Generation Kill, which is basically a book version of the article series that he wrote and published in Rolling Stone Magazine.

Recently HBO adapted Generation Kill into a mini-series that ran sometime last year; I got the series on DVD and in the midst of watching it, I decided I wanted to get my hands on the book to read. In the meantime, I stumbled across One Bullet Away by Nathaniel Fick, the lieutenant of the platoon that Wright embedded with, and I read that book while I waited for Generation Kill to come in through ILL.

Generation Kill: Devil Dogs, Iceman, Captain America, and the New Face of American War came about as a result of the author's experience as an embedded reporter with First Reconnaissance Battalion of the U.S. Marine Corps. Wright rode shotgun with one of the team leaders in Lt. Nathaniel Fick's platoon; for much of the early operations in Iraq in 2003, First Recon was at the 'tip of the spear' of the invasion. This the Iraq war experience as seen through the eyes of the enlisted personnel with whom Wright spent much of his time. Wright gives vivid descriptions of individual personalities within the unit.
One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine Officer by Nathaniel Fick instead focuses on Fick's experience in training and combat as a Marine officer. The book opens with his decision to accept a commission with the U.S.M.C. upon graduation from Dartmouth College and follows his experience in Officer Candidate School, his decision to pursue a position as an infantry officer, and his first fleet deployment. Fick recounts receiving the news of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the other side of the world while his ship was in port in Australia and then the ship's immediate deployment to the Middle East and his platoon's eventual mission as some of the first Marines to deploy into Afghanistan. Upon completion of his platoon's mission in Afghanistan, Fick is given the opportunity for a new post with First Reconnaissance Battalion. He completes Reconnaissance training and soon is deployed with his new platoon to Kuwait to begin staging the invasion of Iraq. The book does not end with this deployment but rather follows him to his next billet and his decision to leave the Marine Corps. After he is discharged from the military he applies to graduate schools, and this is where the book ends. One thing I must say about Fick's story is that despite the fact that you already know the outcome, for example, you know he doesn't wash out of the Infantry Officer Course or the Reconnaissance training and that he survives Iraq, even in early chapters, the story remains suspenseful.

Both books are well written, and one should really read both of them, if only, to see Iraq war through two seperate perspectives. I highly recommend these books if you enjoy reading true accounts of military experience and of combat.

One Bullet Away is available upon request from Annville Free Library and Myerstown Community Library. Generation Kill is available upon request from Interlibrary Loan (unfortunately, it is not available in county, so if you are interested in reading it, please ask someone at your library's circulation desk about requesting it).

--Reviewed by Ms. Angie

Comments

Matthew Goldin said…
Great review! I thought you might be interested in Evan Wright's new book, which comes out in April. Here's the description:

"From his work as a reporter at Hustler magazine, to his National Magazine Award–winning writing for Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair, Evan Wright has always had an affinity for outsiders—what he calls “the lost tribes of America.” The previously published pieces in this collection chart a deeply personal journey, beginning with his stark but sympathetic portrayals of sex workers in Porn Valley, through his raw portrait of a Hollywood überagent-turned-war documentarian and hero of America’s far right. Along the way, Wright encounters runaway teens earning corporate dollars as skateboard pitchmen; radical anarchists plotting the overthrow of corporate America; and young American troops on the hunt for terrorists in the combat zones of the Middle East. His subjects are people for whom the American dream is either just out of grasp, or something they’ve chosen to reject altogether. Sometimes frightening, usually profane, and often darkly comic, Hella Nation is Evan Wright’s meticulously observed tour of the jagged edges of all those other Americas hiding in plain sight amid the nation’s malls and gated communities. The collection also includes an all-new, autobiographical introductory essay by the author."

Popular posts from this blog

How To Be A Heroine: Or What I've Learned From Reading Too Much by Samantha Ellis

I feel as if I could write a book subtitled "What I've Learned From Reading Too Much" except all my lessons would be culled from Greek mythology, the Babysitters' Club, the lives of British queens, crime mysteries, suspense thrillers and celebrity and entertainment gossip.  I first ran across How To Be A Heroine by Samantha Ellis in an ad in BookPage.  The title sounded intriguing and once I looked it up on Amazon, I was in for reading it.  It reminds me of the literacy autobiography writing assignment that I had in one of my English composition classes in college--except this is the literacy autobiography on steroids. The premise of this book is that the author revisits the seminal texts that she read in her youth by examining the lessons and impressions of the novels that she had upon her first readings when she was younger.  Ellis has then re-read the novels as an adult specifically for the writing of her own book to see if the novels hold up to her original i

Heat Lightning by John Sandford

I'd previously read John Sandford's first Virgil Flowers novel, Dark of the Moon , a few years back and found it to be a quick, well written read.  Recently I discovered he has since written three more Flowers titles and decided to start with the second title and read through to the fourth and most recent one.   Heat Lightning is the second Flowers installment.  The darkness of the crimes committed that must be solved in the novel are leavened by the lighter presentation of Flowers and the story.  It works well together--a dark crime doesn't always need dark prose to back it up. Virgil Flowers is Lucas Davenport's go to man in the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension when there's a sensitive, tough or otherwise puzzling case to solve.  Flowers has a high clearance rate and can often turn around a case in about a week.  This  particular case is especially perplexing with quite a few red herrings thrown into the mix to throw everyone--Flowers and the reader in

The Whisperers by John Connolly

If there was one thing Jimmy didn't care for, it was competition, ... There were some exceptions to that rule: he was rumored to have a sweet deal with the Mexicans, but he wasn't about to try to reason with the Dominicans, or the Columbians, or the bikers, or even the Mohawks. If they wanted to avail themselves of his services, as they sometimes did, that was fine, but if Jimmy Jewel started questioning their right to move product he and Earle would end up tied to chairs in the [bar] with pieces of themselves scattered by their feet, assuming their feet weren't among the scattered pieces, while the bar burned down around their ears, assuming they still had ears. from page 86 The Whisperers is John Connolly's newest Charlie Parker installment in which some beloved characters reappear and in which previous characters from another Parker installment reappear to shed further light on the big baddie that may or may not be coming for Parker in the future. This newest inst