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Summary Of Philip Caputo's A Rumor Of War

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A Rumor of War, written by Philip Caputo is a memoir chronicling the author’s experience as a soldier in the U.S. Marine Corps before and during the Vietnam War. After serving in the Marines, from 1964 to 1967, Caputo went on to become a journalist for the Chicago Tribune, eventually returning to Vietnam in 1975 where he covered the fall of Saigon. He has written fifteen books, and numerous articles for publications like the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, and the Los Angeles Times. Caputo makes it clear that his book is not an historical account of the Vietnam War, but rather a record of his personal experience. The book is divided into six sections. The prologue describes Caputo’s reasons for writing the book, as well as a brief summary of the war itself from the perspective of a soldier. The following three sections record Caputo’s actual experience in the Marines during the war. Finally, there is an epilogue in which Caputo describes his return to Vietnam as a reporter and the end of the war. The final section is a postscript, that was added to the book in 1996, which details Caputo’s experience writing the book and dealing with his newfound fame after it was published. In the first section of his book, …show more content…

He also describes what it was like to write the book and how the popularity of his work was greater than he could have imagined. His tone in these sections is much more that of a civilian, and not a soldier, and this lets the reader feel that there is an end to the madness Caputo has endured, at least to some extent. The most successful aspect of this book is Caputo’s ability to show his readers both the good and bad sides of himself and the soldiers he knew, as well as the true psychological effects of warfare. This book should be read not only by Historians and History majors, but all college-level

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