On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill
in War and Society (Kindle Edition) by LTC Dave Grossman
Nonfiction
863 KB / 400 pages
2 Stars
I'm not sure how to review this book. I bought it because I
write novels, and now and then people die, and I was looking for something that
would tell me what goes through the mind of the one who causes the death. A
firm believer in the "no such thing as a free lunch," I'm pretty sure
that for most people, the taking of, or suspected taking of, another human's
life is traumatic. I was looking for case studies. I found more useful
information, for me, on reruns of M*A*S*H and NCIS.
As a noncombat veteran of the Vietnam era, I had ample
opportunity to talk to many GIs who had seen combat. Their stories, and the stories told to LTC Grossman differed, greatly.
Perhaps because he was an Officer and I was Enlisted Swine? Perhaps because he
spoke testosterone and I spoke estrogen? I don't know. But I do know that the
stories I heard about the My Lai incident from men who were there were vastly
different than the stories he recounted. Perhaps all the stories are true, and
distance from the event shapes the memories into something more easily
acceptable by both the witnesses and society.
I truly do not understand how anyone with his advanced
combat training never saw combat, but that has nothing to do with the book,
other than I think it colors his overall reporting. He mentions, with
justifiable pride, the courses he took, and survived, but then hastens to state
he never saw combat. The Army spent a great deal of money training him for
combat, why didn't they send him? Think how he could have helped those GIs if
he could have related to them on a combat experience. Think of the good he
could have done "on site."
His research, if that's what it was, seemed to come from
casual conversations with no formal questionnaires, and nothing that was peer
reviewed or vetted. He talks about PTSD as if it was something the Vietnam Vet
invented, when in fact it had been around for hundred, thousands, of years, but
had was not formally named until the era of Vietnam.
I certainly do not recommend the Kindle version, if you are
a reader of footnotes. I found it very difficult to go from the text to the
footnote and then back to the text. I am one who loves footnotes, but gave up.
I read some of them when I got to the end, but by then they meant little.
There is a psychological cost in learning to kill, and then
in doing the actual killing. And I think distance, both physical and
psychologically, plays a role in that cost. For an excellent description of
that cost, and a great read, I suggest The Gate to Women's Country –by Sheri S.
Tepper.
A thoughtful review on a controversial subject, Lenora! I loved your pithy statement. '...he spoke testosterone while I spoke estogen'!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jeanette. ;-)
ReplyDelete