'Fallen Angels' by Walter Dean Myers is one of the best novels I've read about what being an American soldier on the ground fighting a war is like. The author said after the book was published, which was 1983, women began buying this book to give to their sons and husbands. The women did not want the boys and men to enlist. Reading the novel did change minds, and some of the boys stayed in high school instead of signing up to go to war.
I have copied the book blurb because it is accurate:
"Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers is a young adult novel about seventeen-year-old Richie Perry, a Harlem teenager who volunteers for the Army when unable to afford college and is sent to fight in the Vietnam War. Perry and his platoon—Peewee, Lobel, Johnson, and Brunner—come face-to-face with the Vietcong, the harsh realities of war, and some dark truths about themselves. A thoughtful young man with a gift for writing and love of basketball, Perry learns to navigate among fellow soldiers under tremendous stress and struggles with his own fear as he sees things he’ll never forget: the filling of body bags, the deaths of civilians and soldier friends, the effects of claymore mines, the fires of Napalm, and jungle diseases like Nam Rot.
Available as an e-book for the first time on the 25th anniversary of its publication, Fallen Angels has been called one of the best Vietnam War books ever and one of the great coming-of-age Vietnam War stories. Filled with unforgettable characters, not least Peewee Gates of Chicago who copes with war by relying on wisecracks and dark humor, Fallen Angels “reaches deep into the minds of soldiers” and makes “readers feel they are there, deep in the heart of war.”
Fallen Angels has won numerous awards and honors, including the Coretta Scott King Award, an ALA Best Book for Young Adults, a Booklist Editors Choice, and a School Library Journal Best Book. Fallen Angels was #16 on the American Library Association’s list of the most frequently challenged books of 1990–2000 for its realistic depiction of war and those who fight in wars."
Richie Perry is a kid when he arrives in Vietnam in 1967, unaware of the bloodiness of war injuries and the chaos of war. Like many, he enlisted because he had nothing else he could think of to do with his life. At first, he is cautious of the other squad members. They come from everywhere - from Chicago to Georgia to Puerto Rico, from small towns and big cities. Everyone is a stranger. Some of the officers seem competent, while others make him afraid because they don't really seem to know how to protect the squad when they are out on patrol or under fire. But most of all, the shock of killing and the extreme fear of maybe being killed changes everything he understands and believes.
The main character, who narrates the story in first-person perspective, and along with the other soldiers, speaks conversationally and in joking around with the usual profanity of young men. This swearing caused many schools to ban the book in the 1980's.
Banning a book because of an occasional printed "asshole" or "chickenshit" or "damn" is incredibly strange to me since the book also describes bloody painful injuries, graphic brutality and agonizing deaths. Briefly. The characters also suffer horrible fears and nightmares, see friends die, and all the while having no understanding of their orders into life-and-death situations. The soldiers don't know how to separate the enemy fighters from civilians, and they accidentally or purposefully kill children. Perry daydreams about going home, desperate to live, as do his friends. They cry for their mothers, literally, in battle and in dying. The novel is a realistic depiction of being a teenage soldier in an actual war - the Vietnam War. But heaven's! The characters say "shit" and "fuck" openly in print! Can't be having swear words being read by high school boys! Omg!
I highly recommend this book, especially to high school boys who think war is all fun and excitement. And especially to Black-Americans. The author, a Black-American, mentions in passing some military officers will intentionally order the Black men of a squad or battalion to face the enemy upfront first, keeping the White guys safely back away from the brunt of the fighting. However, this is not a predominant or approved tactic, nor does it continue for very long, because men of all colors who are dying together or who are facing death together actually tend to bond fiercely together despite the few racists. In the Vietnam War, there were rumors that American soldiers sometimes conspired to "frag" officers or other soldiers who were murderously racist or dangerously stupid.
I did see online that some bans of this book are occurring today because of the brief mention of racism in the book - so, now it's being defined in some states as a novel promoting critical race 'theory', or it is felt to be unpatriotic. Conservative adults simply don't want this award-winning book in the hands of any young men from any era, whether it's the twentieth or twenty-first century. Where would the country be if young men understood and fought in war as well-educated and thoughtful soldiers, instead of as murderous prejudiced thugs? Right? Ok, then. I suggest buying a hardcopy to pass around.