- Source: Dispatches (book)
- Apocalypse Now
- The Second Sex
- James Fallows
- Pertempuran Waterloo
- Amos Elon
- Badan Keamanan Nasional
- Jessica Valenti
- Karl Marx
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Kutang
- Dispatches (book)
- Dispatch
- List of Dispatches episodes
- Lizzie Borden
- Deer Hunting with Jesus
- The Next Civil War
- Dispatches (magazine)
- Americana (Sides book)
- Book of Mormon
- Michael Herr
Dispatches is a New Journalism book by Michael Herr that describes the author's experiences in Vietnam as a war correspondent for Esquire magazine. First published in 1977, Dispatches was one of the first pieces of American literature that portrayed the experiences of soldiers in the Vietnam War for American readers.
Dispatches arrived late. Herr served as Esquire’s correspondent from 1967 to 1969, and returned to the United States intending to produce a book about what he’d seen there immediately, but 18 months after his return, he suffered a nervous breakdown due to the events that he witnessed and stopped writing for five years, until it was ultimately published in 1977.
Featured in the book are fellow war correspondents Sean Flynn, Dana Stone, and Dale Dye, and photojournalist Tim Page.
Dispatches was reprinted in 2009, by Everyman's Library as a contemporary classic.
Reception
John le Carré called Dispatches "the best book I have ever read on men and war in our time." It was featured in the journalism section of The Guardian's 100 greatest non-fiction book list in 2011.
After publishing Dispatches, Herr disclosed that parts of the book were invented, and that it would be better for it not to be regarded as journalism. In a 1990 interview with Los Angeles Times, he admitted that the characters Day Tripper and Mayhew in the book are "totally fictional characters" and went on to say:
A lot of Dispatches is fictional. I've said this a lot of times. I have told people over the years that there are fictional aspects to Dispatches, and they look betrayed. They look heartbroken, as if it isn't true anymore. I never thought of Dispatches as journalism. In France they published it as a novel.... I always carried a notebook. I had this idea—I remember endlessly writing down dialogues. It was all I was really there to do. Very few lines were literally invented. A lot of lines are put into mouths of composite characters. Sometimes I tell a story as if I was present when I wasn't, (which wasn't difficult)—I was so immersed in that talk, so full of it and so steeped in it. A lot of the journalistic stuff I got wrong.
Similarly, in a separate interview with Eric James Schroeder, he said:
I don't think it's any secret that there is talk in the book that's invented. But it's invented out of that voice that I heard so often and that made such penetration into my head.... I don't really want to go into that no-man's-land about what really happened and what didn't happen and where you draw the line. Everything in Dispatches happened for me, even if it didn't necessarily happen to me.
Adaptation
Dispatches was adapted into a musical with music by Elizabeth Swados.
In screenplays
Herr worked on the narration for the movie Apocalypse Now and co-wrote the screenplay for the movie Full Metal Jacket. Several scenes and pieces of dialogue used in the book were later also used in those movies.