One of the greatest Vietnam War novels ever written, by an
award-winning writer who experienced it firsthand.
Deployed to Vietnam with the U.S. Army's 1069 Intelligence Group, Spec.
4 James Griffin starts out clear-eyed and hardworking, believing he can
glide through the war unharmed. But the kaleidoscope of horrors he
experiences gets inside him relentlessly. He gradually collapses and
ends up unstrung, in step with the exploding hell around him and waiting
for the cataclysm that will bring him home, dead or not.
Griffin survives, but back in the U.S. his battles intensify. Beset by
addiction, he takes up meditating on household plants and attempts to
adjust to civilian life and beat back the insanity that threatens to
overwhelm him.
Meditations in Green is a haunting exploration of the harrowing costs
of war and yet-unhealed wounds, "the impact of an experience so
devastating that words can hardly contain it" (Walter Kendrick, the New
York Times Book Review). Through passages gorgeous, agonizing, and
surreal, Stephen Wright paints a searing portrait of a nation driven to
the brink by violence and deceit.