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Maggot

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Fiction. At Marine Corps basic training, Parris Island, the 70 recruits of Platoon 197 are so many "maggots" to their drill instructor. Sgt. Maguire relentlessly destroys the individuality of each recruit only to rebuild him as a marine--or ship him home, a dishonored wash-out.Among Maguire's maggots are Tom Adamczyk, terrified and determined to succeed, and Joe Waite, whose careless competence makes him seem a natural for squad leader. Both have joined the Corps for no very good reason; both are suddenly jolted into an awareness of the commitment they have made. When the brutality of basic training culminates in an official investigation, Adamczyk and Waite are forced to make decisions that will shape the rest of their lives."MAGGOT is a great book, full of anger and power and humor and heart."--Ron Hansen"Parris Island will make a man of you or break you totally, many have suggested. This strong, well-written novel tells the story of varying shades of possibility in between. These are real people in the hands of this author and the outcome may surprise you."--Publishers Weekly"Flanagan's characters are interesting and believable and the plausibility of the novel is upheld even in the surprise ending."--The Washington Post"As an expert at grabbing a reader, Robert Flanagan holds his own in the finest company. MAGGOT is a living American classic--a book that bites and never lets go."--X. J. Kennedy

Hardcover

Published January 1, 1975

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About the author

Robert Flanagan (1941–) is an author and playwright. He was the Director of Creative Writing at Ohio Wesleyan University for 30 years before retiring to write full time.

Flanagan joined the U.S. Marine Corps reserve shortly after high school, and went through boot camp at Parris Island. After leaving the service, he received his B.A. from the University of Toledo and his M.A. from the University of Chicago.

Flanagan's fiction has been collected in anthologies such as The Norton Book of American Short Stories, Best Ohio Fiction, and Ohio Short Fiction. His first book, "Maggot," about his experience in the military. He has also published five chapbooks of poetry.

Flanagan is the author of the full-length plays "Jupus Redeye" and "Volleys."

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Kit Fox.
401 reviews59 followers
January 18, 2011
Want to relive the first half of Full Metal Jacket but in novel form? Then this is the book for you, maggot. Sadistic drill instructors, institutionalized humiliation, all that fun stuff and more to be had on gay ol' Paris Island.
15 reviews
February 22, 2021
Army basic training in 1974 was pretty tough, and I got kicked in the butt (literally) a few times, but it wasn't anything like this (and was about 3 weeks shorter, too, which makes a big difference when you're just trying to hang on).
You just have to respect anyone who can go through all this and survive reasonably intact. That is the essence of the Marines---they can take anything, and will. Recruits start learning about that reputation right away, and have to live up to it or they're out. They have to learn how to suffer without whimpering.
It's worth bearing in mind that most boot-camp inmates were children just a few years earlier. Most of them are not yet fully mature. So the basic-training experience is a real shock to the system. Recruits confront many realities for the first time, and the environment they're in makes those realities especially harsh. They do have the advantage of being more physically and mentally adaptable than full-fledged adults. But they are less capable of putting what is happening to them in context.
The novel surprised me. On first picking it up (my wife brought it home in a box of books from a thrift shop), I didn't think it would be nearly as good as it is. It's written well and unpretentiously. It poses interesting moral questions and explores them thoroughly. The main characters---two drill sergeants and two "maggots"---have depth and are intriguing. And, the novel is entertaining and keeps you turning pages as the tensions build.
One of the better books I've read in a while.
1,265 reviews24 followers
June 14, 2025
a book about peculiar values as they pertain to courage and loyalty. it's a book about the relationship between a platoon and their drill instructor, and follows the increasing abuse and the questioning of the purpose of that abuse (does the abuse make the marine's stronger, tougher, more loyal to each other, can you bond over the abuse and if so doesn't that make abuse worth it and if so why so if not why not). The book is surprising in its characterizations, which makes for internally rich characters. It also does the expected boring thing instead of making the novel a crescendo of heroics that ends with a speech about morality. this makes it an unfunny book. that's ok. it's better probably. heroics make things like boot camp on Paris Island SEEM heroic; and that heroism in a uniform is the kind of propaganda that the book doesn't allow itself. It's (I'm assuming! full disclosure, I am not a marine!) a realistic portrayal of these emotions, this hopeless.
Profile Image for Philip.
129 reviews
October 24, 2023
Read it after navy boot camp and while I was attending sonar school in San Diego. That was 1972. Hard to remember the plot or any details, but I do remember that I thought it was a really good read (a twenty-year old's opinion). Might have to read it again.
Profile Image for wally.
3,636 reviews5 followers
October 22, 2011
here it is october 22nd 2011 and just now i recall reading this book years ago, in paperback...and i believe it was 1977....i was attending a school for radar operators...great lakes illinois...maggot...

wish i could recall where i found my copy...perhaps on base, perhaps the chicago train station downtown...they must have a name for it...i knew it as the train station, cigar smells, tobacco nonetheless...paperbacks in a wire rack and some time to kill before boarding to head back...

i've had a few nightmares since serving...dreams where i'm back and i'm wondering wtf, over? wtf you doing, dude?

and me, heh! well best make the best of it....the time will pass.

but then i've known marines (whud the "crap" say when it hit the fan?....marine!.....*rimshot*)

i've known marines who have nightmares not about being in again, but about being back in boot camp.

that is what this is about.

Profile Image for James.
Author 9 books148 followers
February 28, 2011
I remember reading this in the summer of '75. I also remember that I really enjoyed it. Now I wish that my copy of it would (magically) reappear so I could read it again... *sigh** ...but, just for that privilege, I'll probably have to find a used book dealer and relinquish more cash than I'd care to.
Profile Image for Tom.
124 reviews
June 9, 2016
Another, the DI is over-the-top type of novel. At least some of the other characters are more fleshed out. The JDI could have been a better counterpoint to the actions of the DI. And there was an attempt at some balance in outlooks.
5 reviews
March 9, 2009
a novel about the brutality of life at the Parris Island Marine Training Base from a guy who served there
Profile Image for Gossamer.
8 reviews
April 6, 2013
Wow. Great read - intense, infuriating, and compelling. I NEVER want to join the Marines.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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