(Listed in alphabetical order.
To see what pages each character appears on, check the
index.)
Azar: A very young man who does
not understand compassion or kindness. He ridicules a young girl whose
family has been killed. He blows up a puppy. He takes great joy in
torturing Jorgenson, the medic. He seems to love pranks more than
anything else, and he has no sense of the gravity of death and murder.
Mary Anne Bell: She arrives a
seventeen-year-old girl from middle America, but she quickly becomes
part of Vietnam. She learns how to hunt from the Green Berets, but soon
she moves beyond even them, and disappears into the jungle. She loves
the way Vietnam makes her feel: as if she is all there, and can never
lose herself. When her boyfriend last sees her, she is wearing a
necklace of human tongues.
Elroy Berdahl: Owner of the
Tip Top Lodge in northern Minnesota. He understands Tim's dilemma, and
tries to help him: he gives him money, asks no questions, and takes him
out on the lake far enough that he could easily swim to Canada. He even
ignores Tim's tears when Tim realizes he can't bring himself to run
away. He is silent, kind and serious, and Tim appreciates it.
Norman Bowker: A quiet, polite
soldier who hates the pressure of trying to be brave. When Kiowa dies,
Bowker feels he died with him. When he returns to his hometown, Bowker
no longer feels he can talk to people there: no one understands what he
went through. He is intelligent and his parents support him, but he
cannot find any meaning in a job or in school. He tries to pretend
nothing is really wrong, but he desperately wants to tell his story and
asks Tim to write it for him. The story is a failure, and he eventually
kills himself.
Jimmy Cross: A sensitive,
dreamy Lieutenant, Cross must lead his men through the rice paddies of
Vietnam. He would rather be back in New Jersey with Martha, a girl he
loves who does not love him back. He knows she never will, and this
tortures him, and distracts him from his work. When a man dies and
Cross thinks he could have prevented it if he hadn't been thinking
about Martha, he abruptly decides that he has to learn to think only of
his job in the field. He never forgives himself for forgetting his
responsibility to his men. Still, after the war he continues to love
Martha, who never marries and remains mysterious and distant.
Dead man: The man Tim
killed--or didn't kill--with a grenade one early morning. Tim imagines,
based on his appearance, that the young man would have been a scholar,
not a fighter. He would have been afraid of war and hopeful that the
war would end soon.
Henry Dobbins: A kind and
gentle man, but not very bright. He is superstitious, wearing his
girlfriend's pantyhose around his neck, believing they will protect
him. He tries to be moral, and he has simplistic ideas about what
should or should not be done: he prevents Azar from making fun of a
grieving Vietnamese girl, and he is friendly with Vietnamese monks.
Mark Fossie: A young naïve
boy who brings his girlfriend to Vietnam. They had always planned to
marry young and have three beautiful children, so when she grows apart
from him, more and more interested in life in Vietnam, he is very
disturbed. But soon she disappears for good, and there is nothing he
can do. She has become part of the jungle, and is lost to him.
Green Berets: A group of
soldiers who set themselves apart from the others. Silent and sinister,
they are almost like animals, who live to hunt. The other soldiers are
afraid of them, because they seem to live by a different code: they are
soldiers for life.
Dave Jensen: A young,
naïve and paranoid soldier. He desperately tries to keep clean in
the field, even stealing soap from hotel rooms when he gets vacation
time. After he breaks Strunk's nose, he breaks his own, so that Strunk
will know that they are even. He seems to have a skewed idea of
justice---even Strunk knows he deserved to have his nose broken, so
there was no reason for Jensen to hurt himself too.
Bobby Jorgenson: The medic who
replaces Rat Kiley. When Tim gets shot, Bobby hesitates before running
over to care of him, because he is afraid of getting shot himself. Tim
almost dies. This infuriates him, even though Bobby apologizes
repeatedly and the other soldiers later tell Tim that Bobby has matured
and become a better soldier. Tim is only satisfied after he has
pretended to be the enemy and frightened Bobby half to death. He then
feels they are even--though he also hates himself for being so cruel.
Kathleen: Tim's young daughter.
She asks him questions about the war, and he takes her to the place
where Kiowa died, but she does not seem to understand much of what she
is asking about. She does not realize how complicated his answers are,
and he tells her almost nothing, though he would like for her to
understand.
Rat Kiley: A nineteen year old
medic. Tim admires him because he has a sense of humor, is kind, and is
brave. Rat takes care of Tim when he gets shot, and as Tim goes off to
the hospital, Rat almost hugs him. Rat is a good medic and he takes
care of the other men even when he is frightened for his own life.
However, he gradually loses his mind. He believes that bugs are trying
to kill him. He sees everyone, including himself, as a collection of
organs. He finally shoots himself in the foot because he can't take
being in Vietnam anymore. The men, who all like him, understand that he
is not a coward, and they wish him well.
Kiowa: A devout Baptist, and
an American Indian. The other men tease him about both these things
often, but Kiowa does not respond. He is kind to everyone and tries to
have appropriate moral reactions to the war--he wants to feel bad about
Ted Lavender's death, for example. He tries to comfort Tim after Tim
kills a man, something no one else in the company might think to do.
His death is one of the worst events of the war for his entire company:
they all loved him and knew he was a good person, and his death seems
pointless.
Ted Lavender: The first man to
die in their company. He was afraid, and took drugs to calm his nerves,
until he was so high that he hardly even knew he was at war. He was
killed suddenly and without warning: one moment he was walking toward
the group, and the next he was on the ground.
Curt Lemon: Rat Kiley's best
friend. He steps on a mine one day when they are playing catch
together. Tim understands Rat's grief, but he never liked Curt: he was
too caught up in trying to be brave, and most of the time he was just a
silly daredevil.
Linda: The first girl Tim ever
loved. They go on a date when they are only nine. Their love is
unspoken, simple, awkward and pure. Linda is dignified, graceful, happy
and understanding. She has a brain tumor, and she dies a few months
after their date. Tim writes stories about her to try to bring her
back, and he feels that he partially succeeds. However, she is also the
reason he is so terrified of death.
Martha: The girl that Jimmy
Cross loves. She is quiet and somber, and though she has boyfriends, he
is almost sure she is a virgin. An English major in college, she tells
him about the authors she loves. She is kind to him, but she does not
love him, and she never gets married. Even years later when he tells
her he still loves her, she has nothing to say.
Tim O’Brien: The narrator. The
author of The Things They Carried
is also, of course, named Tim
O'Brien, and there are other similarities between the author and the
narrator. The line between the two of them is blurred. The narrator is
a thoughtful, guilt-ridden man. He knew that Vietnam was an unethical
war, but he fought anyway, because he couldn't tell his family he
wasn't going. Twenty years later, he is still writing about this
mistake, and all the horrible things he saw and did. He believes that
stories help him work through these things: they give meaning to who he
is now, by linking him to the past. They also bring the dead back to
life, allowing him to talk to people he loves even though they are gone.
Mitchell Sanders: A literate
and funny man who has strong convictions about stories. He often gets
angry when other soldiers tell stories too slowly, or with too much
detail. He looks for morals in real life, even when the other men think
he is being naïve. He enjoys elaborate and clever jokes, like
mailing his lice to his draft board.
Lee Strunk: Steals Jensen's
jackknife, then is surprised when Jensen tries to apologize for beating
him up over it. He knows he was wrong to steal, so he doesn't
understand why Jensen would feel guilty. He thinks he is brave at the
beginning of the war, but when he gets injured, he is terrified of
death.