As a war novel written by a former soldier,
The Things They Carried shares a great deal with other war novels of similar authorship. In 1929 the novel
All Quiet on the Western Front or,
Im Westen nichts Neues, by Erich Marla Remarque was published in Germany. Remarque was a veteran of World War I, and the book chronicles the extreme anguish, both mentally and physically, most soldiers experienced during the war. It also explored the pervasive sense of alienation that soldiers felt from the society that sent them to war, and their inability to ever really return home. In just its first eighteen months in print, it sold 2.5 million copies in twenty-five different languages. Ernest Hemingway's
The Sun Also Rises and
For Whom the Bell Tolls similarly explore chaotic war experiences and the way that war has a lifelong alienating effect on soldiers. Kurt Vonnegut's
Slaughterhouse Five (1969) uses a similar disjointed narrative as many of the stories in
The Things They Carried to capture and portray the chaos of war.