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Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk: A Novel Kindle Edition

4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 3,337 ratings

This award-winning satire shares a day in the life of a nineteen-year-old U.S. soldier home on leave from the Iraq War to take part in an NFL halftime show.

A ferocious firefight with Iraqi insurgents at “the battle of Al-Ansakar Canal”—three minutes and forty-three seconds of intense warfare caught on tape by an embedded Fox News crew—has transformed the eight surviving men of Bravo Squad into America’s most sought-after heroes. For the past two weeks, the Bush administration has sent them on a media-intensive nationwide
Victory Tour to reinvigorate public support for the war. Now, on this chilly and rainy Thanksgiving, the Bravos are guests of America’s Team, the Dallas Cowboys, slated to be part of the halftime show alongside the superstar pop group Destiny’s Child.

Among the Bravos is the Silver Star–winning hero of Al-Ansakar Canal, Specialist William Lynn, a nineteen-year-old Texas native. Amid clamoring patriots sporting flag pins on their lapels and Support Our Troops bumper stickers on their cars, the Bravos are thrust into the company of the Cowboys’ hard-nosed businessman/owner and his coterie of wealthy colleagues; a luscious born-again Cowboys cheerleader; a veteran Hollywood producer; and supersized pro players eager for a vicarious taste of war. Among these faces Billy sees those of his family—his worried sisters and broken father—and Shroom, the philosophical sergeant who opened Billy’s mind and died in his arms at Al-Ansakar.

Over the course of this day, Billy will begin to understand difficult truths about himself, his country, his struggling family, and his brothers-in-arms—soldiers both dead and alive. In the final few hours before returning to Iraq, Billy will drink and brawl, yearn for home and mourn those missing, face a heart-wrenching decision, and discover pure love and a bitter wisdom far beyond his years . . .

Poignant, riotously funny, and exquisitely heartbreaking, 
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk is a devastating portrait of our time, a searing and powerful novel that cements Ben Fountain’s reputation as one of the finest writers of his generation.

Now a major motion picture directed by Ang Lee

Praise for Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk

Finalist for the National Book Award

Winner, National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction

Winner, Los Angeles Times Book Award for Fiction

“Brilliantly done . . . grand, intimate, and joyous.” —New York Times Book Review

“The Catch-22 of the Iraq War.” —Karl Marlantes

From the Publisher

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Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk
Beautiful Country Burn Again
Brief Encounters with Che Guevara
Customer Reviews
4.1 out of 5 stars 3,337
4.4 out of 5 stars 91
4.3 out of 5 stars 528
Price $9.34 $17.99 $17.96

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Amazon Best Books of the Month, May 2012: Billy Lynn and his Bravo squad mates have become heroes thanks to an embedded Fox News crew’s footage of their firefight against Iraqi insurgents. During one day of their bizarre Victory Tour, set mostly at a Thanksgiving Day football game at Texas Stadium, they’re wooed by Hollywood producers, smitten by Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders, and share a stage at halftime with Beyonce. Guzzling Jack and Cokes and scuffling with fans, the Bravos are conflicted soldiers. “Okay, so maybe they aren’t the greatest generation,” writes debut author (!) Ben Fountain, who manages a sly feat: giving us a maddening and believable cast of characters who make us feel what it must be like to go to war. Veering from euphoria to dread to hope, Billy Lynn is a propulsive story that feels real and true. With fierce and fearless writing, Fountain is a writer worth every accolade about to come his way. --Neal Thompson

Review

“[An] inspired, blistering war novel…Though it covers only a few hours, the book is a gripping, eloquent provocation. Class, privilege, power, politics, sex, commerce and the life-or-death dynamics of battle all figure in Billy Lynn’s surreal game day experience.” — New York Times

Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk is not merely good; it’s Pulitzer Prize-quality good . . . A bracing, fearless and uproarious satire of how contemporary war is waged and sold to the American public.” — San Francisco Chronicle

“A masterful echo of ‘Catch-22,’ with war in Iraq at the center. …a gut-punch of a debut novel…There’s hardly a false note, or even a slightly off-pitch one, in Fountain’s sympathetic, damning and structurally ambitious novel.” — Washington Post

“Fountain’s excellent first novel follows a group of soldiers at a Dallas Cowboys game on Thanksgiving Day…Through the eyes of the titular soldier, Fountain creates a minutely observed portrait of a society with woefully misplaced priorities. [Fountain has] a pitch-perfect ear for American talk…” — The New Yorker

“Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk is a big one. This is the brush-clearing Bush book we’ve been waiting for.” — Harper's Magazine

“Brilliantly done . . . grand, intimate, and joyous.” — New York Times Book Review

“For Memorial Day why not turn to a biting, thoughtful, and absolutely spot-on new novel, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk…This postmodern swirl of inner substance, yellow ribbons, and good(ish) intentions is at the core of Ben Fountain’s brilliant Bush-era novel.” — The Daily Beast

“Ben Fountain combines blistering, beautiful language with razor-sharp insight…and has written a funny novel that provides skewering critiques of America’s obsession with sports, spectacle, and war.” — Huffington Post

“A brilliantly conceived first novel . . . The irony, sorrow, anger and examples of cognitive dissonance that suffuse this novel make it one of the most moving and remarkable novels I’ve ever read.” — Nancy Pearl, NPR, Morning Edition

“Seething, brutally funny…[Fountain] leaves readers with a fully realized band of brothers…Fountain’s readers will never look at an NFL Sunday, or at America, in quite the same way.” — Sports Illustrated

“Biting, thoughtful, and absolutely spot-on. . . . This postmodern swirl of inner substance, yellow ribbons, and good(ish) intentions is at the core of Ben Fountain’s brilliant Bush-era novel.” — The Daily Beast

“The Iraq war hasn’t yet had its Catch-22 or Slaughterhouse-Five, but Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk is a contender… A wicked sense of humor, wonderful writing and, beneath the anger and outrage, a generous heart.” — Tampa Bay Times

“It’s a darkly humorous satire about the war at home, absurd and believable at the same time.” — Esquire

“Darkly comic…Rarely does such a ruminative novel close with such momentum.” — Los Angeles Times

“Fountain’s strength as a writer is that he not only can conjure up this all-too-realistic-sounding mob, but also the young believably innocent soul for our times, Specialist Billy Lynn. And from the first page I found myself rooting for him, often from the edge of my seat.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune

“[A] masterly . . . tightly structured book [with] a sprawling amount of drama and emotion.” — The Rumpus

“Passionate, irreverent, utterly relevant Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk offers an unforgettable portrait of a reluctant hero. Ben Fountain writes like a man inspired and his razor sharp exploration of our contemporary ironies will break your heart.” — Margot Livesey

“[T]he shell-shocked humor will likely conjure comparisons with Catch-22 and Slaughterhouse Five…War is hell in this novel of inspired absurdity.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“A truly wondrous first novel.” — Shelf Awareness

“[T]he Catch-22 of the Iraq War....Fountain applies the heat of his wicked sense of humor while you face the truth of who we have become. Live one day inside Billy Lynn’s head and you’ll never again see our soldiers or America in the same way.” — Karl Marlantes, bestselling author of Matterhorn

“Ben Fountain stormed to the front lines of American fiction when he published his astonishing...Brief Encounters with Che Guevara. His first novel will raise his stature and add to his splendid reputation. Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk is both hilarious and heartbreaking.” — Pat Conroy

“Fountain is the Pen/Hemingway Award winner of the bristly and satisfying Brief Encounters with Che Guevara, so I expect lots from this book.” — Barbara's Picks, Library Journal

“Ben Fountain’s Halftime is as close to the Great American Novel as anyone is likely to come these days―an extraordinary work that captures and releases the unquiet spirit of our age, and will probably be remembered as one of the important books of this decade.” — Madison Smartt Bell

“While Fountain undoubtedly knows his Graham Greene and Paul Theroux, his excursions into foreign infernos have an innocence all their own. In between his nihilistic descriptions, a boyishness keeps peeking out, cracking one-liners and admiring the amazing if benighted scenery.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer

“So much of Fountain’s work...reads with an easy grace.... [S]ometimes genius is anything but rarefied; sometimes it’s just the thing that emerges after twenty years of working at your kitchen table.” — Malcolm Gladwell, The New Yorker

“Here is a novel that is deeply engaged with our contemporary world, timely and timeless at once. Plus, it’s such fun to read.” — The Millions

“The chasm between the reality and the glorification of war hasn’t been this surreal since Joseph Heller’s Catch-22.” — Sacramento Bee

“…wickedly affecting…Billy Lynn has courted some Catch-22 comparisons, and they’re well-earned. Fountain is a whiz at lining up plausible inanities and gut-twisting truths for the Bravos to suffer through.” — Philadelphia City Paper

“[A] wonderfully readable book [which] does something similar to Why Are We in Vietnam?, asking hard questions about the cultural short-sightedness that contributed to our involvement in Iraq. As a veteran myself, I can attest that it’s spot on.” — BookRiot

“To call Fountain’s work enjoyable would be an understatement because it quite simply is one of the best novels written in the past five years.” — Texas Books in Review

“The best book about the Iraq War and Destiny’s Child that you’ll ever read.” — Entertainment Weekly

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00655KLOY
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Ecco; 1st edition (May 1, 2012)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 1, 2012
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.3 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 325 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 3,337 ratings

About the author

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Ben Fountain
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Ben Fountain's novel BILLY LYNN'S LONG HALFTIME WALK received the National Book Critics' Circle Award, the Los Angeles Times Book Award, the Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Award, the PEN/New England Cerulli Award for Excellence in Sports Writing, and the Jesse Jones Award for fiction from the Texas Institute of Letters, and was a finalist for the National Book Award in both the US and the UK (international authors division). The film adaptation of BILLY LYNN, directed by three-time Oscar winner Ang Lee, was released in 2016 by Sony Pictures. Fountain's short story collection BRIEF ENCOUNTERS WITH CHE GUEVARA received the PEN/Hemingway Award, the Barnes & Noble Discover Award for Fiction, and a Whiting Writers Award. Fountain's short fiction has appeared in Harper's, Zoetrope: All-Story, the Paris Review, Esquire, the Sewanee Review, DALLAS NOIR, and HAITI NOIR II, among other publications. His nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times, the New York Times Magazine, the Guardian, the Wall Street Journal, Le Monde, Texas Monthly, and elsewhere, and his reportage on post-earthquake Haiti was broadcast on the radio show This American Life. Fountain grew up in the tobacco country of eastern North Carolina, and is a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke University Law School. A former attorney in private practice, he has lived in Dallas, Texas for over thirty years. In September, 2018, Ecco/HarperCollins will publish Fountain's nonfiction book BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY BURN AGAIN, which is based on his reportage for the Guardian of the US presidential campaign of 2016.

Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
3,337 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book an engaging and thought-provoking read with a good story. They praise the writing quality as brilliant and poetic. The characters are described as compelling, realistic, and beautifully drawn. Many readers find the story heartfelt, sad, and poignant. However, opinions differ on the war novel - some consider it one of the best and most serious novels they have read, while others feel it lacks the gut-punch impact of other war novels.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

482 customers mention "Readability"432 positive50 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They appreciate the compelling thoughts and stories within the pages. The book is described as brilliant, poignant, and funny.

"A biting and quite funny satire that delivers a punch made more powerful because there is an utter believability to most of the story — you can just..." Read more

"...In conclusion, I suppose, it was a book I did enjoy and I still look forward to Fountain's next work, but I think he fell short of making this a..." Read more

"...with older men who have their own stories, the profane but hilarious banter between men who have long since quit caring about social norms, the dead-..." Read more

"...I'd give it 3.5, if I could, because it is engaging, it does have vivid imagery (particularly the locker room and supply room scenes)...." Read more

310 customers mention "Writing quality"274 positive36 negative

Customers enjoy the writing quality of the book. They find it engaging, with poetic and beautiful language that enhances the story. The characters are well-illustrated and described in a detail-oriented manner. Overall, the book is well-structured and ends with an honest wrap-up.

"...but here the events leading to the Bravo’s Victory Tour are fully documented and indeed available for anyone to see on YouTube...." Read more

"...Fountain is an immensely gifted writer. The writing on every page is dazzling, and his gift at description, character building and lyricism are so..." Read more

"...I'd give it 3.5, if I could, because it is engaging, it does have vivid imagery (particularly the locker room and supply room scenes)...." Read more

"...The visit home by Billy is particularly moving and his relationship with his sister (who feels responsible for his being in the Army) is especially..." Read more

226 customers mention "Thought provoking"214 positive12 negative

Customers find the book insightful and captivating. They appreciate the author's clear perspective on reality and interesting situations. The book sparks an important discussion about society and American culture. Readers praise Fountain's marvelous use of metaphors and symbolism, making the analysis unforgettable.

"...a punch made more powerful because there is an utter believability to most of the story — you can just see a lot of events depicted happening “for..." Read more

"...never lets his themes and ideas overtake the characters and the emotional rhythms of the story...." Read more

"I feel like this is a book with a purpose, the purpose being to illustrate complete shallowness of the phrase "I support our troops." And to..." Read more

"...his sister (who feels responsible for his being in the Army) is especially touching and the conflict created in Billy becomes very real and..." Read more

87 customers mention "Character development"72 positive15 negative

Customers find the characters compelling and realistic. They say the author is able to describe them in a short sentence. The book provides an entertaining comparison of personalities, motivations, and socioeconomic status. While readers are not emotionally invested in the characters, they appreciate the portrayal of a squad and real people.

"...writing on every page is dazzling, and his gift at description, character building and lyricism are so jaw-droppingly good I found myself..." Read more

"...The characters seem real, in the way saccharine seems real...." Read more

"...Billy is a fascinating character, as are some of his fellow soldiers, and the way Ben Fountain lets their story unfold is fantastic...." Read more

"...of the halftime show, makes for a very entertaining, very telling comparison of personalities, motivations, and socioeconomic status...." Read more

60 customers mention "Heartfelt story"57 positive3 negative

Customers find the story heartfelt and inspiring. They describe it as sad, hilarious, and contemplative. The book is filled with bleak humor and grief, and the characters are relatable with humanity, empathy, and pathos. The prose is tight and devastating, provoking sympathy and anger.

"...progresses, the satire becomes much more obvious and the story much more heartfelt...." Read more

"...This novel is at times powerful, heartbreaking, funny, sad, but overall it's a richly written piece of fiction that made me pause and reflect, if..." Read more

"...trilogy deserves widespread recognition for its brilliant writing and tragic, yet humorous insights to soldiers and war." Read more

"...The book is sad at times, hilarious at other times and contemplative in Billy's experiences...." Read more

184 customers mention "War novel"128 positive56 negative

Customers have different views on the book. Some find it a serious and well-written war novel that highlights the realities of war and how it affects those involved. They appreciate the fresh similes and how it captures the zeitgeist. However, others feel it lacks emotional impact and is more like someone's diatribe against the War in Iraq and corporate America.

"...Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain is one of the best novels I read this year, or ever for that matter...." Read more

"...It too offers a great look at the war from the perspective of the foot soldiers, although in this case that perspective is filtered through a..." Read more

"...Lynn these people - and their words - ring hollow, their patriotism is self-serving and their phony nationalism only disguises their real motives -..." Read more

"...novels is Joseph Heller’s seminal World War II satire Catch-22, a vicious, funny, trenchant take on the insanity of war...." Read more

88 customers mention "Pacing"51 positive37 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some find it fast-paced and easy to read, with a good tone. Others feel the plot is poorly developed and the pacing slows down at times.

"...The way that Fountain so effectively portrays the sarcastic, ball-busting, but I've got your back camaraderie of the soldiers is one of the..." Read more

"...That being said, I have to say that the book starts very slow and during the first few chapters, I wasn't even sure I'd finish it...." Read more

"...But in Fountain’s hands, Billy Lynn is rapid-paced, funny, moving, and just plain incredible...." Read more

"...Fountain is at his worst when he breaks the narrator's voice, the voice of an enlisted grunt, and launches into a polemic, leftist diatribe, or, in..." Read more

72 customers mention "Satire"45 positive27 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the satire in the book. Some find it humorous and ironic, criticizing the war on terror and certain American values. Others feel the book contains stereotypical stereotypes, too many similes and metaphors, lacks genuine humanistic insight, and overplayed themes. There is also some profanity used appropriately.

"...involved, as well as those who watch from the sidelines, but it never proselytizes...." Read more

"...deals with war and fighting in a realistic sense the book contains quite a bit of profanity, but it is used in appropriate context and is far from..." Read more

"...are authentic, as is their view of themselves and the world; they are vulgar, coarse and have a devotion and love for each other that is difficult..." Read more

"...The book is a parody and a jazz riff on post-modern culture...." Read more

Great book, subpar Kindle
3 out of 5 stars
Great book, subpar Kindle
This review is for the Kindle edition only. This was a terrific novel, as I'm sure you already know if you are here. By all means buy it. But if you are going to read it on your Kindle by all means, keep a magnifier handy. Our hero Billy sometimes wanders off and hears bits and pieces of conversations in word clouds, which I'm sure look great on the printed page. In the Kindle version, however, they are printed microscopically and cannot be enlarged like other text. No idea why the e-publisher could not have gone to a little effort to make them readable; it would not have affected the integrity of the literary device one bit to make the words readable to the naked eye.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2013
    A biting and quite funny satire that delivers a punch made more powerful because there is an utter believability to most of the story — you can just see a lot of events depicted happening “for real” — Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain is one of the best novels I read this year, or ever for that matter. I liberally used the highlight function on my Kindle, bookmarking dozens of passages for later recall.

    It’s a pity that a certain segment of the American population won’t bother to read this book, which shines an uncomfortably bright spotlight on issues of class, politics, economics, patriotism and religion.

    After taking part in a dramatic firefight in Iraq that was filmed by an embedded crew from Fox News, nineteen-year-old Specialist Billy Lynn and the seven other surviving members of his Army squad are on the final day of a whirlwind two week “Victory Tour” of the US. Finishing up at Texas Stadium as guests of the Dallas Cowboys for the annual Thanksgiving Day game, Billy and his mates will report to Fort Hood immediately after the game before returning to Iraq to finish out the year left on their tour.

    The soldiers of Bravo Squad are hung over and reeling from the frenetic pace of Victory Tour, but they’re also still trying to deal with the death and injury of friends in the battle, during which Billy displayed great courage and coolness under fire. Tagging along is Albert, a Hollywood producer trying to put together a movie deal to make the Bravos rich and even more famous, and the battle-scarred, mysterious and dangerously deaf Major Mac, their Army-assigned chaperone.

    In the time it takes to play a football game, Billy and the Bravos will have to make it through countless speeches, bask in the adulation of a many, survive assaults on their minds and bodies by friends and foes, try to strike it rich, strive to meet halftime headliners Destiny’s Child … and did I mention meeting the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders?

    Although called by some reviewers Catch-22 for the Iraq War, I think Mr. Fountain’s debut novel differs from Joseph Heller’s classic in a couple important ways. First and foremost is, as mentioned above, the realism. Granted, it has been years since I read and enjoyed Catch-22, but I recall much of it to be so wildly improbable as to be considered a farce — I’m not knocking it, just saying. In contrast, most of Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk rings with a truthfulness that ratchets up the reader’s emotions.

    “Billy and Mango stand there eating scalding hot pizza and know that their fame is not their own. Mainly it’s another thing to laugh about, this huge floating hologram of context and cue that leads everyone around by the nose, Bravo included, but Bravo can laugh and feel somewhat superior because they know they’re being used. Of course they do, manipulation is their air and element, for what is a soldier’s job but to be the pawn of higher? Wear this, say that, go there, shoot them, then of course there’s the final and ultimate, be killed. Every Bravo is a PhD in the art and science of duress.” — Fountain, Ben (2012-05-01). Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk: A Novel (pp. 28-29). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

    One negative reviewer I read complained that Billy and the other Bravo soldiers have “nothing in common” with soldiers they knew, but I disagree wholeheartedly. Some are sketched lighter than others, but I recognized plenty from my days as a division officer and department head in the Navy. Need a more “Army-centric” comparison? Try watching the excellent Sebastian Junger-Tim Hetherington documentary Restrepo, something I did again after reading this book to confirm my initial impressions.

    A second departure from Catch-22 is — despite what some negative reviewers say — the U.S. Army, indeed the military in general, comes across in a positive light. The Army was at best complicit, and likely wholly responsible for, the myth-creation surrounding Private Jessica Lynch and former-NFL player Pat Tillman, but here the events leading to the Bravo’s Victory Tour are fully documented and indeed available for anyone to see on YouTube.

    For sure, shots are taken at politicians responsible for the Iraq War and the hollowness and hypocrisy of those for whom “support the troops” has become a reflex that doesn’t extend to allowing any sacrifice that will actually affect the spouter of said platitudes, but the soldiers who are actually conducting the dirty business of war in a foreign nation are treated with respect.

    Many of the positive attributes of military service that I recall and indeed experienced are highlighted. Billy and the Bravos are more mature and focused than their peers — just nineteen, Billy is thought at one point to be many years older — and have exercised responsibilities the breadth and depth of which few civilians will experience. That isn’t to say Billy and the Bravos are saints or even grown-ups; they’re a rough-around-the-edges bunch, smart but not schooled, trained to be deadly but not socially graceful, and bonded to each other as combat soldiers. And very few of them come from money.

    “What cards these Bravos are, what a grab-ass band of brothers. Okay, so maybe they aren’t the greatest generation by anyone’s standard, but they are surely the best of the bottom third percentile of their own somewhat muddled and suspect generation.” — Fountain, Ben (2012-05-01). Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk: A Novel (p. 166). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

    As noted above, it is a pity that some won’t bother to read this fine novel. But clear positions are expressed on so many topics that run counter to the expressed beliefs of many political conservatives and those in our polarized society willing to openly cross party lines seem to be an endangered species. Some of sharpest passages address the disparity between the haves and have-nots — both politically and economically — in America. The Iraq War’s legitimacy is addressed, as is the integrity of the country’s leaders who started that conflict. As Hollywood producer Albert, who admits to avoiding his own military service, puts it:

    “All the big warmongers these days who took a pass on Vietnam, look, I’d be the last person on earth to start casting blame. Bush, Cheney, Rove, all those guys, they just did what everybody else was doing and I was right there with ’em, chicken as anybody. My problem now is how tough and gung-ho they are, all that bring-it-on crap, I mean, Jesus, show a little humility, people. They ought to be just as careful of your young lives as they were with their own.” — Fountain, Ben (2012-05-01). Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk: A Novel (p. 55). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

    I could go on and on, but you get the point. Read this book and I hope you enjoy it and find as much to ponder as I did. When you’re done, read or re-read Catch-22 (I’m going to) and watch Restrepo.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2012
    I was a huge fan of Ben Fountain's short story collection Brief Encounters with Che Guevara: Stories (P.S.), so I was eagerly anticipating his first novel. The novel focuses on one of the author's favorite themes - innocents serving as the pawns for power players in the world of politics. Here the focus in on Billy Lynn, a 19-year-old soldier who, along with his fellow soldiers in the Bravo squadron, become heroes in the Iraq War. Because their battle with Iraqi insurgents was captured on film and shown repeatedly on Fox TV, they become celebrities for people trying to justify a questionable war. They come home to the United States for a two-week Victory Tour, and the novel occurs entirely on the final day of the tour when they are the showcased guests at a Dallas Cowboys football game against the Chicago Bears. Fountain is an immensely gifted writer. The writing on every page is dazzling, and his gift at description, character building and lyricism are so jaw-droppingly good I found myself highlighting section after section until I stopped because I would have highlighted the whole book.

    My quibbles with the book are that from the outset you don't have a clear sense of some big thing that Billy wants, and there's no clear adversary preventing him from getting it - and without those definite desires and obstacles to them, it's not the kind of book you can't wait to get back to, as you're reading, to see if the character will be able to find a way to reach his goals. The Bravo soldiers will have to go back to the war, and while Billy's sister begs him not to and tries to introduce him to people who could spirit him away, it isn't until the end of the book that Billy starts to give that option any serious consideration. For much of the book he seems to accept his return as a given.

    The one dream the Bravo soliders collectively have is to make a lot of money from a movie made about their exploits because a Hollywood producer has bought the rights to their lives. That producer, Albert, tags along throughout their day at the football game, but at least through the early part of the book he becomes a tad obnoxious and repetitive as he keeps squawking into his cell phone with all the pompous, over-the-top insincerity masked as brutal honesty that has been portrayed so many times before in books, movies and TV shows like Entourage. The one funny bit here is that the movie deal starts to get some traction when Hillary Swank becomes interested in the story, on the condition that Billy's character become a female hero for the film, but the references to Swank's interest get so repetitive they do start to border on the monotonous. The only real adversary here - and a very thin one - is Norm Ogelsby, the team owner, who's an imitation of the real egomaniac, Jerry Jones, the owner of the Cowboys. But the real tension with him doesn't come until the end of the book when he becomes interested in starting a film company to make the movie himself and becomes a hard-nosed negotiator with Albert and the soldiers. Of course, the main adversary here, would be the Bush Administration for intiating a war on the false pretense of getting rid of Saddam's WMDs, but those adversaries loom far in the background here.

    The other want Billy has is a relationship with one of the Cowboy cheerleaders, who makes out with him in a hidden corner during a photo shoot with the soldiers. Billy is a virgin, and his instant attraction to an immature cheerleader, is nothing more than the most obvious dreamy, boyhood urge. What the novel does very well is show what little interest people have in actually getting to know the soldiers, while they're fawning all over them, telling them they are heroes and expressing gratitude for their service. It's interesting that the soldiers are trying to get a movie made about themselves because for the hordes of people they meet - the powerful, the famous, and the everyday folk - what the soldiers mostly serve as is a blank screen upon which people can project all their own feelings about the war and how the United States should be exacting revenge in the aftermath of 9/11. One of the best and funniest scenes occurs in a pre-game exchange with the Cowboys' secondary. When the soldiers visit the locker room, most of the players stare off blankly, blocking out the routine interruptions in their pre-game rituals. But the defensive backs draw Billy in, eager for details of what guns Billy uses and taking sadistic pleasure in hearing gory details of his battles, as they entertain fantasies of joining up with the soldiers for a two-week tour in which they could wreak some havoc without having to leave their high-paying jobs permanently.

    The soldiers know they're being used by the government as a propaganda machine, and they're just interested in making some money off the entire P.R. operation. The way that Fountain so effectively portrays the sarcastic, ball-busting, but I've got your back camaraderie of the soldiers is one of the highlights of the book. I do wish we'd had a clearer description of the battle that made the soldiers famous, but a description of what happened is delayed in the early portion of the book, and when it comes later, it's often in bits and pieces. But there is a very powerful description of the one fatality of that fight dying in Billy's arms and the impact that has on Billy's thought patterns.

    I feel a little silly offering so many critiques of a book that's full of so many brilliant sentences, descriptions and observations. Just one section -- the prolonged description of the tour the soldiers get of the equipment room by the equipment handler - could serve as a showcase of how prodigiously talented Fountain is. The catalogue of the endless variety of gear the team requires is so eye-opening and so humorously told, you can't believe that a writer could make that subject so fascinating.

    I just wish I could have along the way rooted along with Billy for something bigger than getting money from a smarmy movie producer or a sexual romp with a drop-dread gorgeous cheerleader. And while the prospect of death hangs over Billy constantly as he contemplates returning to Iraq, the brutality of that war only comes through in a few brief passages, such as the death scene noted above and another in which Billy recalls the horror of what happens to the human body when it's shot at in close range with a high-powered weapon. In conclusion, I suppose, it was a book I did enjoy and I still look forward to Fountain's next work, but I think he fell short of making this a classic on the level of Catch 22, to which I know it has been compared.(If Billy had an urge as compelling as Yossarian's desire to avoid another combat mission, and as worthy an adversary as the crazy bureaucracy that blocked Y from his goal, this book might have had the same impact for me as that classic.) Another current novel in this vein of comic/satirical (with touches of tragedy) looks at the plight of Iraqi soldiers is Last One In (P.S.) by Nicholas Kulish, which didn't get the attention it deserved. It too offers a great look at the war from the perspective of the foot soldiers, although in this case that perspective is filtered through a worefully unprepared gossip writer, who by virtue of sharing a name with a more experienced but indisposed newspapersman, ends up embedding with them as a reporter.
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  • Bob Lees
    5.0 out of 5 stars WOW
    Reviewed in Canada on December 27, 2024
    Ben Fountain is a seriously gifted writer. Read this book! I don’t know where to begin to tell you how much I enjoyed it.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent read remembering a 19 year old is the narrator
    Reviewed in Australia on November 19, 2016
    When a firefight became the leading story on every news channel in America, Bravo Company are sent back to the US for a whirlwind tour. Two days before going back to Iraq, they are Guests of Honor at a Dallas Cowboys NFL game. Bravo Co. are trotted out to a fawning adoring public, as dutiful soldiers who believe in their mission. Ben Fountain's fictional story of Billy Lynn's attempt to reconcile the reality of War, with the hype of one NFL game. Excellent read remembering a 19 year old is the narrator
  • Kei
    5.0 out of 5 stars アン・リーが映画化
    Reviewed in Japan on October 23, 2016
    「ライフ オブ パイ」などの映画監督のアンリーが映画化しました。それで読み始めましたがとても良かったです。映画版は私は見ていませんが批評家からは微妙な反応が多いですが。原作はとても良かったです。今アメリカはタイムリーですし(笑) アメリカの象徴でもあるアメリカンフットボールのスーパーボールの試合のハーフタイムの演出に呼ばれた兵士たちのお話です。ヒーローと演出されるが当然実際の戦場を経験してきた兵士たちとのGAPは深いです。「押しつけがましさ」もあまり感じらずに最後まで読めれます。余韻が残る小説です。映画も見てみようかと。
  • housemartin
    5.0 out of 5 stars An exceptionally good read - quite the most enjoyable book I've read ...
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 4, 2015
    An exceptionally good read - quite the most enjoyable book I've read for several months.

    That said, it seems only sensible to point out that this is a Marmite book. If you're unfamiliar with or irritated by American colloquialisms, if you dislike bad language and swearing, if you think the war in Iraq was a good thing and if you dislike or know nothing at all about American football, this book may not be for you. However, the language and swearing isn't that bad and it's never gratuitous. And it's possible you could enjoy the book without knowing anything about American football and its traditions.

    On the other hand, if you know and like America, if you have contempt for George W Bush and the political thugs who embroiled the US in an unwinnable war for highly dubious reasons, if you enjoy watching the Super Bowl and if you enjoyed Tom Wolfe's "A Man in Full", there's every chance you will love Ben Fountain's book about Billy Lynn and Bravo squad as much as I did.

    This is a satire and it's clever and very funny. Seldom laugh-out-loud funny, but you'll find yourself grinning most of the time. The dialogue is as good as any I've encountered in a book. Never a false note, crystal clear and true. And it's the dialogue that produces most of the humour. Sometimes satire becomes tedious, when the author starts preaching or laying it on too thick. In this book, the satire is subtle and gentle and Fountain never (in my opinion) loses his sense of proportion. At times the humour and style reminded me of Tom Wolfe, but this is every bit as good as his stuff and one third of the length. It's beautifully written, too.

    If you decide to read it, I hope you get as much fun and pleasure from it as I did.
  • francine
    5.0 out of 5 stars splendido e originale
    Reviewed in Italy on October 4, 2013
    Libro pieno di inventiva, da leggere se possibile in lingua originale. Un testo originale per tema trattato e come viene trattato.

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