Spicing up the sauce. Strictly cheeni kum.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Latest read: The Forever war

I just finished reading "The Forever War" by Dexter Filkins. It was an interesting read. I liked it..for most part. I picked it up because it was on the Nytimes list of must-reads for 2008. I didn't know at the time that Filkins worked for the Times! That doesn't make the book any less readable, thankfully! Its pretty well written. No need to embellish the story to make a point here. He's been there, done that and seen it all. Its hard to not to admire his guts...and his stomach! Initially, the lack of commentary bothered me. I felt like I wasn't getting his perspective on things..just a bald description of facts. But then, he let his thoughts slip in once every couple of chapters. And that was enough. His style of writing is...spartan..for want of a better word. A little jarring at times. Lots of to-ing and fro-ing between times and countries. But it worked for me.

There's a lot of Crash, boom, bang and a healthy amount of Eww! Gross moments. Descriptions of where Marines crap in the middle of war and suchlike. But then there are the little stories of people he met. Like the 9 year old orphan Fatima who ran with him one day. The story of the cool discussion of his kidnapping between a sheik he was interviewing and his translator. The story of how the warring factions in Afghanistan seemed uninterested in the war...they even fought lazily! Those little stories had me hooked.

I felt like he'd lost some part of himself in Iraq. I honestly have to wonder why he kept going back. That hellhole...why would anyone go back...unless they had to? I guess he had to. If I see him around in Cambridge someday, I'd like to tell him I thought it was a brave book.

I've decided to read Rajiv Chandrasekaran's Imperial Life in the Emerald City next. I liked the guy when he came on "The Daily Show" and I feel like I want to understand this war better. My benchmark for liking people is now linked to their performance on the Daily Show. Hmm.

Next in line: I've got 2666 by Robert Bolano on the way, and Sacred Games by Vikram Chandra at home. Also, an anthology of Pablo Neruda's poems and a collection of essays by David McCullough. If only I didn't have a PhD to get through!

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