The Phantom Blooper

The Phantom Blooper

First edition hardback cover
Author Gustav Hasford
Country United States
Language English
Genre Autobiographical, War novel
Publisher Bantam Dell
Publication date
Feb 1990
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN 0-553-05718-9
OCLC 20352730
813/.54 20
LC Class PS3558.A7233 P45 1990
Preceded by The Short-Timers

The Phantom Blooper is a 1990 novel written by Gustav Hasford and the sequel to The Short-Timers (1979). It continues to follow James T. "Joker" Davis through his Vietnam odyssey. The book was supposed to be the second of a "Vietnam Trilogy", but Hasford died soon after completing it, and before writing the third installment.

Plot

The novel begins sometime after The Short-Timers left off and is divided into three parts.

"The Winter Soldiers"

In "The Winter Soldiers", Joker (having been demoted from Sergeant to Private) is still at the Khe Sanh base, which is about to be abandoned by American Marines after withstanding a two-month siege. He believes most of his previous squad-mates are dead, even the seemingly indestructible Animal Mother. Joker blames their deaths on "The Phantom Blooper": an elusive enemy, supposedly American and armed with an M79 grenade launcher, who fights alongside the Viet Cong against his countrymen.

Joker is still haunted by the memory of his friend Cowboy, who has been wounded and whom Joker killed in order to keep their squad from being cut down by a sniper. As a result, Joker's behavior has become increasingly erratic and violent. He sets up one of his squad-mates to be killed, in an attempt to draw the Phantom Blooper out of hiding, then forces an inattentive Marine on guard duty to hold a live hand grenade with the pin out. Later, as the Viet Cong attempt to overrun the base, he splits his platoon sergeant's tongue with a straight razor. The Marines turn back the attack, suffering heavy losses in the process. The next night, Joker ventures out in search of the Phantom Blooper but is wounded by friendly fire, and captured by the enemy.

"Travels With Charlie"

"Travels With Charlie" begins over a year later. Joker has been living and working in a small Viet Cong village, waiting for a chance to escape. He has not been tortured or sent to a POW camp, and his captors have begun to trust him to some degree. In Joker's mind, his best chance is to fool them into believing he has converted to their cause, to accompany them on an attack against an American position, and then to make his escape when the shooting starts. As time passes, however, he begins to side increasingly with the Viet Cong, seeing them - the people he has been trained to kill - as ordinary human beings just like himself. When a team of Army soldiers arrives to rescue him, he is wounded in the ensuing firefight but manages to shoot down one of their choppers with a discarded M79 before passing out.

"The Proud Flesh"

In "The Proud Flesh", Joker spends time convalescing and undergoing psychiatric therapy at Yokosuka Naval Hospital in Japan. He quickly makes it clear that he does not regret any of his actions as a Viet Cong captive, and he expresses his disgust and outrage at having been sent by his country to fight in a futile war. Despite threats of a court-martial for treason, he is given a Section 8 discharge and sent home to the United States.

Upon arriving in California, Joker finds that his squad radioman, Donlon, is alive and well, and has become an antiwar protester. Animal Mother, he also learns, was captured by the Viet Cong but escaped from a POW camp; he is still an active Marine. Joker and Donlon attend a demonstration that is quickly and forcefully broken up by the police, but Joker manages to slip away with the help of a cop who had served with him at Khe Sanh. Next, Joker travels to Cowboy's home in Kansas, and has a brief and uneasy meeting with Cowboy's parents. Their son's body was never recovered from the jungle, and Joker does not tell them he fired the shot that killed Cowboy. Finally, Joker reaches his family's farm in Alabama, all the while feeling a growing disillusionment with the war and America. Realizing at last there is nothing left for him in the United States, he sets out to return to Vietnam and his life among the Viet Cong villagers.

Literary significance and criticism

This sequel made less of an impact than The Short-Timers (1979), which was the basis for the film the Full Metal Jacket (1987). (Some dialogue from The Phantom Blooper is also present in Full Metal Jacket.) Nonetheless, The Phantom Blooper was highly regarded by reviewers.[1] Before Hasford died in 1993, he had planned to continue Joker's story in a third novel.

Out of print

According to the Official Gustav Hasford Website maintained by Hasford's cousin, The Short-Timers,[2] The Phantom Blooper,[3] and Hasford's third and last completed book, a noir detective novel titled A Gypsy Good Time (1992),[4][5] are currently out of print. The texts of the two war novels and an excerpt of A Gypsy Good Time were publicly available at the website for at least a decade,[6] but the site has since been redesigned, and Hasford's cousin, who manages the site, has stated he "likely won't be reposting the novel" there.[7]

References

  1. Sanford, Jason (6 October 2006). "Reviving Gustav Hasford". StorySouth. Retrieved 2007-02-14.
  2. Hasford, Gustav (1979). The Short-Timers (1st (hard cover) ed.). Harper & Rowe. ISBN 978-0060117825.
  3. Hasford, Gustav (January 1, 1990). The Phantom Blooper (1st (hard cover) ed.). Bantam Books. ISBN 978-0553057188.
  4. Hasford, Gustav (March 1992). A Gypsy Good Time (First (paperback) ed.). Washington Square Press. ISBN 978-0671729172.
  5. "Web page dedicated to A Gypsy Good Time". Gustav Hasford's official website.
  6. "Original version". Gustav Hasford home page, with the full text of The Short-Timers and The Phantom Blooper novels included.
  7. Jason Aaron (January 2013). "About This Site". GustavHasford.com. Retrieved September 7, 2014.

External links