cover image Soldier's Heart: Reading Literature Through Peace and War at West Point

Soldier's Heart: Reading Literature Through Peace and War at West Point

Elizabeth D. Samet, . . Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $23 (259pp) ISBN 978-0-374-18063-8

Azar Nafisi meets David Lipsky in this memoir/meditation on crossing the border between the civilian world of literature and the world of the military during 10 years of teaching English at West Point. Samet's students sometimes respond to literature in ways that trouble her, but she lauds their intellectual courage as they “negotiate the multiple contradictions” of military life. Considering the link between literature and war, Samet insightfully explores how Vietnam fiction changed American literary discourse about the heroism of military service. Beyond books, Samet also examines how televised accounts of the Iraq War have turned American civilians “into war's insulated voyeurs,” and discusses the gap separating her from the rest of the audience watching a documentary on Iraq. Lighter, gently humorous sections reveal Samet's feelings about army argot. She has been known to ask her mother to meet her “at 1800 instead of at 6:00 p.m.,” but she forbids the use of the exclamation “Hooah!”(“an affirmative expression of the warrior spirit”) in her classroom. Samet is prone to digressions that break the flow of great stories, like an account of her West Point job interview. But this meditation on war, teaching and literature is sympathetic, shrewd and sometimes profound. (Oct.)