Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts

Friday, May 08, 2026

Philip Caputo, Who Wrote Blistering Vietnam War Memoir, Dies at 84

THE NEW YORK TIMES: “A Rumor of War,” about his service as a Marine Corps infantry officer and published in 1977, relentlessly detailed “the things men do in war and the things war does to them.”

Screenshot taken from this NYT article. | Philip Caputo in Canada, in 1987. | Frank Lennon/Toronto Star, via Getty Images

Philip Caputo, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist whose best-selling, disillusioning memoir, “A Rumor of War,” about leading a Marine platoon through the sniper-riddled and booby-trapped jungles of Vietnam, entered the canon of wartime literature, died on Thursday at his home in Norwalk, Conn. He was 84.

The cause was cancer, his son Marc Caputo wrote in a social media post.

The Vietnam War, which cost the lives of at least one million Vietnamese and 58,000 American service members, generated an outpouring of fictional and nonfictional books, by some reckoning more than 3,500 titles.

A few works came to be widely regarded as classics because their authors captured unflinchingly the peculiar mix of boredom and terror in combat, the ambivalence about fighting a war that often seemed pointless and unwinnable, and the disheartening malaise that followed America’s first military defeat.

The standouts include works of fiction, including Tim O’Brien’s “The Things They Carried” (1990), and nonfiction ones like Michael Herr’s “Dispatches” (1977), Ron Kovic’s “Born on the Fourth of July” (1976) and Mr. Caputo’s “A Rumor of War” (1977), which sold two million copies and was translated into 15 languages.

“To call it the best book about Vietnam is to trivialize it,” the novelist and screenwriter John Gregory Dunne wrote in his review of “A Rumor of War” for The Los Angeles Times. “Heartbreaking, terrifying and enraging, it belongs to the literature of men at arms.” » | Joseph Berger | Friday, May 8, 2026