Elizabeth D. Samet, Soldier's Heart (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2007) Soldier's Heart recounts Elizabeth Samet's adventures teaching literature at West Point. Her students were destined to be army officers and many would serve in Iraq; indeed, many wanted to. The tendency is to think of these young men and women as people trained to kill, to unquestioningly carry out the orders given them, regardless of the morality or immorality of those orders.
Adam is fairly typical of the officers to be that Samet met, taught and came to love -- a warrior and a poet inside the same skin. In these pages, she tells their story. The result is a more rounded picture of the military academy and the young men and women who attend it. We learn from Samet's book that our picture of career army officers, mainly gleaned from Hollywood movies, is oversimplified and stereotyped. The ones Samet taught are far more rounded and complicated than you might think. The main thing her book accomplishes is to remind us that no stereotype tells the truth, and that even though they wear identical clothing and follow identical rules, customs and folkways, no two army officers are the same. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Michael Scott Cain 5 July 2008 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |