Christopher Booker is a scholar who wrote that every story falls into one of seven basic plot structures: Overcoming the Monster, Rags to Riches, the Quest, Voyage and Return, Comedy, Tragedy, and Rebirth. Shmoop explores which of these structures fits this story like Cinderella’s slipper.
Plot Type : Voyage and Return
Anticipation Stage and "Fall" Into the Other World
In "On The Rainy River," Tim O'Brien is drafted to go to Vietnam.
Before he's drafted, O'Brien has a totally abstract view of politics. He knows that he doesn't like the war, but for political reasons, not because he's afraid he might have to go. And then, suddenly, he's drafted and it gets personal.
He gets a summer job at a meatpacking plant, and all the blood and slaughter just make him more afraid and sickened by what he's going to have to go do. He thinks about running away to Canada, but chickens out, afraid of the social stigma—just an anticipatory taste of the issues with reputation and weakness he's going to have once he gets to the war.
Initial Fascination or Dream Stage
In "How to Tell a True War Story" and "Spin," O'Brien talks about the more compelling parts of the war.
Even when things seem like they're really not all that bad—the weather is nice, and even though they're carrying a lot, they're really just marching together—someone will step on a mine or get shot, and O'Brien is abruptly reminded that they're indeed still at war. Even the funny, light-hearted things have an element of the weird about them, like Kiowa doing a rain dance in a Vietnamese village or a tranqued-out Lavender talking about how mellow the war is.
Frustration Stage
In "The Man I Killed," O'Brien stares at the body of a dead man.
We've seen some gruesome things, but this is the first time we've dealt with guilt about killing. For some reason, this lends the story an extra darkness that we've not yet seen. Sure, "Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong" was super creepy and "How to Tell a True War Story" was very sad and also gross, but in neither of them did the main characters take another human's life. In "The Man I Killed," we have that shadow appear for the first time.
Nightmare Stage
This starts at "Speaking Of Courage" and lasts pretty much all the way to the end of the book.
You don't get much more nightmarish than an exploding, boiling field of poop that drowns your best friend. That particular nightmare stretches out over four stories—"Speaking of Courage," "Notes," "In the Field," and "Field Trip." But the nightmare doesn't end there.
In "The Ghost Soldier," O'Brien gets obsessed with vengeance and ends up having a bizarre and unpleasant hallucination in which he turns into the war itself. And in "Night Life," Rat goes slightly insane, laughing and calling the war "Just one big banquet. Meat, man. You and me. Everybody. Meat for the bugs" (Night Life.22). Ay caramba.
Thrilling Escape and Return
This kind of works with O'Brien in "Notes" and "The Lives of the Dead." It's subverted with Norman Bowker in "Speaking of Courage" and "Notes."
This is the stage that doesn't quite fit. The intensity of the nightmare that the soldiers deal with in the nightmare stage is such that they don't ever really come back from it.
For Norman Bowker, his voyage ended with the nightmare stage. He even says, in "Notes," that "That night when Kiowa got wasted, I sort of sank down into the sewage with him… Feels like I'm still in deep shit" (Notes.3).
O'Brien, on the other hand, does get to escape a bit through his stories. He pours the nightmares onto the page, bringing his dead comrades back to life with words. The act of doing this is his thrilling escape, his return. But he needs to keep doing it because the escape only lasts while the story is alive. It's not a permanent escape or return; he's perpetually escaping, even twenty years later.