Powers's first novel
The Yellow Birds, which drew on his experiences in the Iraq War, garnered a lucrative advance from publisher Michael Pietsch at Little, Brown. It has been called "a classic of contemporary war fiction" by
Michiko Kakutani, book critic for
The New York Times. The magazine subsequently named the novel one of the publication's 10 favorite books of 2012. Wrote Kakutani: "At once a freshly imagined
bildungsroman and a metaphysical parable about the loss of innocence and the uses of memory, it's a novel that will stand with Tim O'Brien's enduring Vietnam book,
The Things They Carried (1990), as a classic of contemporary war fiction." In an interview with
The Guardian, Powers expounded his motivation for writing
The Yellow Birds: "One of the reasons that I wrote this book was the idea that people kept saying: 'What was it like over there?' It seemed that it was not an information-based problem. There was lots of information around. But what people really wanted was to know what it felt like; physically, emotionally and psychologically." Asked about the best book of 2012, writer
Dave Eggers said this to
The Observer: "There are a bunch of books I could mention, but the book I find myself pushing on people more than any other is
The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers. The author fought in Iraq with the US army, and then, many years later, this gorgeous novel emerged. Next to
The Forever War by
Dexter Filkins, it's the best thing I've read about the war in Iraq, and by far the best novel. Powers is a poet first, so the book is spare, incredibly precise, unimproveable. And it's easily the saddest book I've read in many years. But sad in an important way." Not all critics were so laudatory of
The Yellow Birds, however.
Ron Charles of
The Washington Post wrote that "frankly, the parts of
The Yellow Birds are better than the whole. Some chapters lack sufficient power, others labor under the influence of classic war stories, rather than arising organically from the author's unique vision." Michael Larson of
Salon argues that the book is ruined by "boggy lyricism... There's never a sky not worthy of a few adjectives." And Theo Tait of the
London Review of Books argued that the book "labours under the weight of a massive
Hemingway crush... a trainwreck, from the first inept and imprecise simile, to the tin-eared rhythms, to the final incoherent thought." The book has been adapted on screen in 2017,
The Yellow Birds was directed by
Alexandre Moors and starred
Jack Huston,
Alden Ehrenreich,
Tye Sheridan and
Jennifer Aniston. ==Recent career==