Ambush at Fort Bragg
Written by Tom Wolfe
Narrated by Edward Norton
3/5
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Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
About this audiobook
Ambush at Fort Bragg is classic Wolfe--a blistering send-up of one man's drive for fame and glory and the lengths to which the media will go to showcase their version of the truth. This is Wolfe at his very best--timely, relevant, and right on the money about many aspects of 90s America: the media, the military, the South, discrimination, and homophobia.
From the Compact Disc edition.
Tom Wolfe
Tom Wolfe (1930–2018) was one of the founders of the New Journalism movement and the author of contemporary classics like The Right Stuff and Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers, as well as the novels The Bonfire of the Vanities, A Man in Full, and I Am Charlotte Simmons. As a reporter, he wrote articles for The Washington Post, the New York Herald Tribune, Esquire, and New York Magazine, and is credited with coining the term, “The Me Decade.” Among his many honors, Tom was awarded the National Book Award, the John Dos Passos Award, the Washington Irving Medal for Literary Excellence, the National Humanities Medal, and National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. He lived in New York City.
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Reviews for Ambush at Fort Bragg
28 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This CD naration was done by Edward Norton. And he is a good at doing the stero-type "redneck" voice. It is easy to listen to. This Tom Wolfe novella has a self-important prime time TV producer, Irv Durtscher, trying to get the rating bust show that will get his genius recognized. He belives he can prove that three soldiers from Fort Bragg were resp[onsible for the savage beating and murder of a member of their company because he was of a differrent sexual orientation. Through the use of hidden cameras and mic's, he records these three soldiers over a period of weeks. What he gets is incriminating, but he wants to get them to admit to the crime conclusivly. So he attempts to do the standard TV news ambush. Irv arranges the three to see the footage they have recorded showing them talking about the night of the murder. When he thinks he has them, he sends out the awarded winning Anchor to grill and shock them into admitting they murdered the soldier. But the ranger takes control of the interview. What we see is that the special would have been ruin. All sympathy and support would have gone to this thug. But because Irv wants to show how smart he is. He uses editing to make the trio of soldier look guilty. This just shows how far the media will go to show their version of the truth. And to get ratings! I felt that Wolfe did not tie up all the loose ends. Who was the missing witness? What happened to the soldiers? If it went to trial, what happened to the producer when it was discovered the extent of the editing tha that taken place?
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Fascinating to read reviews of this novella on Amazon. They are all over the map.
My first taste of the national media happened in 1967. I was in college and active in the Civil Rights movement, less so in the budding anti-war crusade. There had been a demonstration announced for that afternoon in front of Franklin Hall, the administration building, so, more out of curiosity I went on over. There were perhaps 10 students milling about and an army of television cameras and media. Obviously, no demonstration was ever going to happen, so the media folks orchestrated one. Clustered a bunch of students together and basically told them to act like it was an event. Clever editing would have made it look much more real than it was.
My second up hand taste was attending a school-board meeting several years later during which some contentious issues were due to be discussed. The television media dutifully showed up at the beginning of the meeting, shot a couple of minutes, and left. The meeting continued for several more hours. When I watched the result on the news that evening, I was stunned. The clear impression left by the reporters was that they covered the entire meeting and what they presented was the meat of the discussion. Total bullshit.
Now I wait a couple of years and read a book about any event or sequence of events and never watch so-called situations develop as hosted by Wolfgang Blitzkrieg.
So I was receptive to Wolfe's short novel of a homophobic killing and the resulting investigative report. The story follows the producer of the "Day and Night" show, a national network investigative reporter series featuring a prominent female anchor. The show sets out to find and reveal the killers of a gay soldier at Fort Bragg, a sprawling military base in North Carolina. (My son went through airborne training there and the descriptions of the surrounding community sleaze that caters to the soldiers, is dead on.)
Wolfe lays out the entire story through Irv's eyes trenchantly displaying how the events are rearranged and altered to get the story they wanted, without any of the moral complexities of the real event. The redneck killers are not portrayed sympathetically, but there motivation is revealed with more subtlety and complexity.
You can tell from reviews that many people took sides and the book raised their ire, some at the portrayal of the soldiers, some at the media, others at the "pornography " (I didn't get that one at all.) But, Wolfe ambushes everyone.
Not one of Wolfe's best, but an intriguing story nevertheless.
A note on the audio. The book is read by Ed Norton who does a credible job, especially with the southern accents. I don't know who the idiot was who added the most irrelevant and distracting background music, but heshould have his license revoked.