Word: toko
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Dates: during 1953-1953
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...Bridges at Toko-ri, by James A. Michener. A short novel about a carrier pilot who found out why he was fighting in Korea (TIME, July...
...Bridges at Toko-ri, by James A. Michener. A short, sometimes blunt novel about a carrier pilot who found out why he was fighting in Korea (TIME, July...
When Brubaker is first seen in James Michener's short new novel, The Bridges at Toko-ri,* he has ditched his damaged jet and is being rescued, half-frozen, by a helicopter team. To the task-force commander, every flyer's life is precious; but this griping fellow, so like one of his own flyer sons lost in the Pacific, is a special concern. Talking to Brubaker after the rescue, the admiral asks: "Still bitter?" And he gets the answer: "Sometimes I'm so bitter I could bitch up the works on purpose . . . Nobody supports this...
What makes Toko-ri different as a war novel is its central theme of responsibility, something other U.S. writers have bypassed in an effort to outdo each other in gaminess, self-pity, resentment and use of four-letter words. Author Michener, a Quaker who overcame his religious scruples to enlist in the Navy in World War II, knows his subject. He is not a great novelist, and Toko-ri will not go down as a great novel. But it is an uncompromising story of fear, truth and death...
Lieut. Harry Brubaker dies. He dies trying to make it back to his carrier after helping to knock out the bridges at Toko-ri. But in his last minute of life, "he was no longer afraid nor was he resentful. This was the war he had been handed by his nation, and in the noonday sun he had only one thought: he was desperately in love with his wife and kids and he wanted to see them one more time . . . Harry Brubaker understood in some fragmentary way the purpose of his being in Korea...