I've read Catch-22 at least half a dozen times. The movie was actually not bad, but couldn't capture it completely. I'm reading a WWII book titled "Who Stoled My Mule?" by Sherman A. Glass, DVM about the CBI theater (China-Burma-India) where my dad was stationed as a veterinarian, also. It's hilarious to read similarities of the "Army Way" portrayed by Heller captured by Dr. Glass. His inspiration for the book was to write about the everyday minutia, hardships and life of GI's and also the animals used so extensively in CBI, especially since it was an area of the war that was on the back burner, so to speak, back in the day.RogueUSMC wrote: Catch 22...I read the book but have never seen the movie. After reading those kinds of books, I hesitate to watch the movie for fear of being disappointed...
The title is based on an incorrigible mule nicknamed "Diablo" aka Do-Bo by the Chinese, that the author saved from being shot and the back thread among the other stories as he moves Diablo from place to place to save him from being destroyed. I think of Diablo as Yossarian in Catch-22.
I was amazed to read of all the rotten food, rations and feed that was shipped to our GI's, the Chinese Army and animals. Even when they received goods that weren't already bad the storage facilites were totally inadequate and much of it would end up going bad as a result. Much was destroyed as if fell out of the make shift baskets used for parachute drops. Part of Glass's job was to train men to recognize how to determine what to throwaway instead of just blindly loading it for shipment, thereby wasting time and logistics. Limited medication and treatment supplies were the norm and Glass used his GI .45 to dispatch far too many animals injured by battle of run down by the crazy Chinese drivers who drove down the middle of roads at breakneck speeds and would plow into anything that didn't get out of the way. My dad didn't talk a lot of his experiences, but what he said about the Chinese, was reflected in Dr. Glass's book.
While the CBI wasn't totally ignored, Europe and the Pacific theater were the main topics of the news media and I think in his book Glass in his small way wanted to fill in some gaps.