Fallen Angels

by

Walter Dean Myers

War, Trauma, and Dehumanization Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
War, Trauma, and Dehumanization Theme Icon
Perseverance and Heroism Theme Icon
Race, Identity, and Belonging Theme Icon
Reality and Fiction Theme Icon
Faith and Hope Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Fallen Angels, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
War, Trauma, and Dehumanization Theme Icon

When Richie Perry arrives in Vietnam as a newly minted infantry soldier, he believes that he and the rest of the American soldiers there serve some higher purpose: ensuring freedom for the Vietnamese people, defeating communism, or defending the American way of life. But when he gets to the “Deep Boonies,” close to the war’s front lines, he learns quickly—and to his dismay—that nothing about war is clear or morally unambiguous. As Northern Vietnamese forces step up their attacks and Perry realizes that the war will neither be as quick or as bloodless as he and others have been led to believe, he loses his ability to justify its brutality. Stripped of a positive reason for fighting, he comes to focus only on his and his friends’ survival. The betrayal of his patriotic values and his basic human ethics (like valuing human life) leads to much of the trauma he experiences in his six months in Vietnam.

This betrayal arises both from the enmity between the two sides in the war and from the way the American armed forces and their Southern Vietnamese allies treat their own soldiers. Enemy mines or gunfire cut down newbie Jenkins, the beloved Lieutenant Carroll, Brewster, and many other soldiers. But Captain Stewart also recklessly volunteers the squad—most of whom are still just teenaged boys—for dangerous missions in hopes of padding his own promotion package. And on dangerous joint missions, ARVN (South Vietnamese) and American forces willingly turn on each other to preserve their own lives. Perry finds himself as disturbed by his enemies’ deaths as he is when his friends die—after all, he knows, enemies and friends are all people. Eventually, he finds himself unable to justify his actions or his country’s; when he writes his final letter to his little brother, Kenny, he desperately tries to avoid portraying himself or anyone else as a hero. Fallen Angels graphically dramatizes the way that war’s brutality dehumanizes the soldiers on both sides of a conflict. And it argues that this dehumanizing tendency to violate basic human values, like the value of life or the importance of trust among an army’s ranks, generates much of the trauma and horror of war.

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War, Trauma, and Dehumanization ThemeTracker

The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of War, Trauma, and Dehumanization appears in each chapter of Fallen Angels. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
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War, Trauma, and Dehumanization Quotes in Fallen Angels

Below you will find the important quotes in Fallen Angels related to the theme of War, Trauma, and Dehumanization.
Chapter 4 Quotes

“You call that a sport?” Monaco asked. “I mean, there you are, you gotta weigh two hundred pounds, and you got a rifle, and you’re against a squirrel that weighs maybe two or three pounds, and he ain’t got nothing.”

“Man, it’s a damn sport!” Simpson protested […]

“The way I figure it,” Monaco went on, “if you hunt a squirrel with a rifle, what do you hunt a bear with? Artillery?”

“Call in some white phosphorous on him,” Brew said. “That’ll get his attention until the jets zero in.”

[…]

“You don’t know nothing about no hunting!” Simpson was getting pissed. “You don’t know what hunting is!”

“What he’s trying to say […] is that the white phosphorous is enough. After it burns the bear’s ass off, then the good sergeant will finish him off with a couple of frag grenades,” [said Lobel].

[…] Sergeant Simpson got up and left the hooch.

Related Characters: Monaco (speaker), Lobel (speaker), Simpson (speaker), Brewster (Brew) (speaker), Richie Perry
Page Number: 49-50
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

An image of the VC we had killed flashed through my mind. I wondered if he had a family? Had he been out on a patrol? When did he know he was going to die?

What was worse than thinking about him dead was the way we looked at him. At least we had cared for Jenkins, had trembled when he died. He was one of us, an American, a human. But the dead Vietnamese soldier, his body sprawled out in the mud, was no longer a human being. He was a thing, a trophy. I wondered if I would become a trophy.

“We won.” Walowick came in after the volleyball game and sat on the edge of the bunk. “They’re paying us off in beer.”

“Way to go,” I said.

“You okay?”

“Yeah.”

“Seeing that dead gook mess you up some?”

“A little,” I said. “Maybe even more than Jenkins.”

“Who’s Jenkins?”

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Walowick (speaker), Jenkins
Page Number: 85-85
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

[The wounded] were all over the place. The medics were so busy they were just tagging guys. The ones they thought they could save they worked on, the others they marked their wounds down. One kid, the angry stain of blood on his T-shirt growing with every breath, watched calmly as the medic wrote up the tag. The medic tied it to his lapel and patted the kid’s shoulder. When the medic left, the kid tried to read the tag without taking it off.

If there were time—if the medic had finished with the one he was fairly sure he could save—he would come back to the kid to see what he could do […] One guy had a plasma bottle strapped to his helmet. He was going through his pockets looking for matches to light his cigarette. He found them but they were soaked through with his own blood. Scotty lit his cigarette.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Doyle, Scotty
Page Number: 103-104
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Then I asked him about the letter.

“You know why that letter sucks?” he asked.

“How come?”

“Because I joined the friggin’ army in the first place so he would stop thinking I was a faggot,” Lobel said. “Now he thinks I’m a creep because I’m in the army.”

“What the hell does he know?”

“You know what I hope?” Lobel asked. “I hope I get killed over here so he has to fit that shit between his vodka martinis.”

“The next time we call for artillery, we’ll aim it right at your pad at home,” I said.

“You know what that jackass doesn’t know?” Lobel said, looking away from me, “He don’t know that now I can go back home and blow him away. That’s what I’m fucking trained for man. That’s what I’m fucking trained for.”

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Lobel (speaker)
Related Symbols: Letters
Page Number: 117
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

The war was different now. Nam was different. Jenkins had been outside of me, even the guys in Charlie Company had been outside. Lieutenant Carroll was inside of me, he was part of me. Part of me was dead with him. I wanted to be sad, to cry for him, maybe bang my fists against the sides of the hooch. But what I felt was numb. I just had these pictures of him walking along with us on patrol or sitting in the mess area, looking down into a coffee cup. It was what I was building in my mind, a series of pictures of things I had seen, of guys I had seen. I found myself trying to push them from my mind, but they seemed more and more a part of me.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Lieutenant Carroll , Jenkins
Page Number: 136-137
Explanation and Analysis:

“The guy’s got to be a spook,” Gearhart said. “You know, CIA.”

“What do they do over here?” Monaco asked.

“Below the DMZ they do pacification stuff, look around to see who is infiltrating, that kind of thing. Then they do a lot of stuff above the ’Z. The navy guys slip them in on the west and the Green Berets slip them around the ’Z through Laos. Down here she’s probably his cover.”

“Is the kid a spook, too?” Monaco asked.

“Who knows?” Gearhart answered. “This is a funny war.”

I didn’t like the idea of having people who were civilians around. It just didn’t seem right somehow.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Monaco (speaker), Gearhart (speaker)
Page Number: 139-140
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

“You trying to figure out who the good guys, huh?” Johnson spoke slowly. “So what you come up with?”

“I guess somebody back home knows what they’re doing,” I said. “What it means and everything. You talk about Communists—stuff like that—and it doesn’t mean much when you’re in school. Then when you get over here the only thing they’re talking about is keeping your ass in one piece.”

“Vietnam don’t mean nothing, man,” Johnson said. “We could do the same thing someplace else. We just over here killing people to let everybody know we gonna do it if it got to be done.”

“That might be a good reason to be over here,” I said.

“That’s for people like you to mess with,” Johnson said.

“I don’t know about that.”

“Then why you messin’ with it?”

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Johnson (speaker), Walowick
Page Number: 148-149
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

“You know, I never thought much about black people before I got into the army. I don’t think I was prejudiced or anything—I just didn’t think much about black people.”

“Well, we’re here,” I said.

“I think I should let his parents know what happened […] I don’t want to be let off the hook.”

“The letter I wrote […] is going to sit better with his family. You might feel bad, like you need to get something off your chest, but don’t drop it on his folks. It’s going to be hard enough just having him dead.”

He looked at me, then pushed the letter across the table. “Yeah, I guess you’re right.”

I wanted to be pissed at him. I wanted to think that he was crap because of what he said about black people. But the only thing I could think about was that I was glad it was Turner, and not me.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Gearhart (speaker), Lieutenant Carroll , Stewart, Nate Turner, Mrs. Carroll
Related Symbols: Letters
Page Number: 172
Explanation and Analysis:

The village looked like the one they had constructed for practice at Fort Devens. Only here there were real people […]

There was a sense of panic in the air. We had our weapons ready. Sergeant Simpson was telling us not to kill the civilians. I didn’t consciously want to kill anybody, anything. But I felt strange. The sight of all the bodies lying around, the smell of blood and puke and urine, made my head spin, pushed me to a different place. I wanted to fire my weapon, to destroy the nightmare around me. I didn’t want it to be real, this much death, this much dying, this waste of human life. I didn’t want it.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Simpson
Page Number: 177-177
Explanation and Analysis:

Later we went to the recreation hooch and watched the news. It was all about President Johnson trying to get a bill passed to help the urban poor, and then something about the Pueblo, which had been taken over by the North Koreans. Then there was a big thing on the Super Bowl, and whether or not the Packers had a dynasty going. It wasn’t real that people were thinking about things like that when all this shit was going on. It just wasn’t real.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Peewee (Harold Gates)
Page Number: 184-185
Explanation and Analysis:

I had come into the army at seventeen, and I remembered who I was, and who I was had been a kid. The war hadn’t meant anything to me then, maybe because I had never gone through anything like it before. All I had thought about combat was that I would never die, that our side would win, and that we would all go home somehow satisfied. And now all the dying around me, and all the killing, was making me look at myself again, hoping to find something more than the kid I was. Maybe I could sift through the kid’s stuff, the basketball, the Harlem streets, and find the man I would be. I hoped I did it before I got killed.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Kenny, Mama
Page Number: 187
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

Lobel damned near dragged Jamal into our hooch.

“Go ahead, tell him what you heard,” Lobel said to Jamal.

“Sergeant Simpson and Captain Stewart got into a fight,” Jamal said. “Captain Stewart told Sergeant Simpson that if he didn’t shut up and get out he was going to bust him down to private.”

[…]

“What they fighting about?” Johnson asked.

[…]

“He found out that Captain Stewart is volunteering Alpha Company all over the place. He asked him what he’s doing that for, and Captain Stewart said that if he didn’t want to fight, he shouldn’t have extended.”

What Jamal said went down hard. We didn’t mind doing our part because it had to be done, even though we didn’t have answers to why we were doing it.

But nobody wanted to go out and risk their lives so that Stewart could make major.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Johnson (speaker), Lobel (speaker), Jamal (speaker), Simpson, Stewart
Page Number: 199-200
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 17 Quotes

“Sometimes,” he said, “prayer can be very comforting. I wonder if any of you men would like to pray with me?”

“No,” I said.

“Why not?”

“You wouldn’t understand if I told you,” I said.

“Try me,” he said.

“I just don’t want to pray,” I said.

“Figure you don’t want to make your peace if you’re not ready to die?”

I smiled. I had to smile. He was right and he knew it. “Something like that.”

“You ever go into combat?”

“Into combat? Yes. I’ve never fired a weapon at anyone, though.”

“You figure if you don’t shoot at anybody, God’s going to take care of you?”

“I don’t know,” he said. “I sure as hell hope so.”

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Father Santora (speaker), Brewster (Brew)
Page Number: 223
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

Peewee skipped his meals the rest of the day. Monaco tried to talk to him, but he wouldn’t answer. It was Johnson who finally got him to talk.

“Hey, Peewee?”

“What?”

“You care anything about these damn kids over here, man?”

“They got kids over here?” Peewee asked.

“Naw, man, all they got is Congs,” Johnson said. “Congs and mosquitos.”

“And rats,” Walowick added.

“Yeah.”

“Hey, Peewee,” I said. “It’s okay to feel bad about what’s going on over here, man. It’s really okay.”

“Me? Feel bad?” Peewee turned over in his bunk and pulled his sheet up around his shoulders. “Never happen.”

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Peewee (Harold Gates) (speaker), Johnson (speaker), Walowick (speaker), Monaco, An Linh
Page Number: 232
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

“He forgot the tags,” Gearhart said. “He left them in the hut.”

“How they gonna let their folks know they dead?” Peewee said.

Gearhart didn’t answer.

What would they do for a body? Would they send home an empty coffin? Would they scrounge pieces from Graves Registration? What would they say to their parents? Their wives? We lost your son, ma’am. Somewhere in the forests he lies, perhaps behind some rock, some tree?

We burned his body, ma’am. In a rite hurried by fear and panic, we burned what was left of him and ran for our own lives.

Yes, and we’re sorry.

Perhaps they would tell them nothing. Not having a body in hand, not having the lifeless form to send with the flat, they would not acknowledge that there was a death at all.

Yes, and we’re sorry.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Gearhart (speaker)
Page Number: 256
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 22 Quotes

It was Monaco. He was sitting against a tree. He had his head in his hands. His piece was about ten meters in front of him. I wanted to go to him, but Peewee stopped me.

“He ain’t sitting there for nothing,” he said.

I looked around. Nothing. What the hell was wrong with this damn war? You never saw anything. There was never anything until it was on top of your ass, and you were screaming and shooting and too scared to figure out anything.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Peewee (Harold Gates) (speaker), Monaco
Page Number: 295
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

I got to sit up in a wheelchair, and the leg felt all right in spite of the cast. It felt good. I hoped it wasn’t. I could make it with a limp. I just didn’t want to go back to the boonies anymore.

We got a call from Lieutenant Gearhart on the ham radio network. He told us the other guys in the squad were all right. It was nice of him to call us, but it wasn’t true. Monaco wasn’t all right. Monaco was like me and Peewee. We had tasted what it was like being dead. We had rolled it around in our mouths and swallowed it and now the stink from it was coming from us. We weren’t all right. We would have to learn to be alive again.

He also told us that Captain Stewart had been promoted.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Peewee (Harold Gates), Monaco, Stewart, Gearhart
Page Number: 304
Explanation and Analysis: