In this thoughtful memoir, National Book Award winner Fussell (The Great War and Modern Memory, Oxford Univ., 1989) explains how World War II shattered his idyllic boyhood and changed everything that came after. Fussell grew up in Pasadena, California, enjoying a pastoral middle-class life untouched by the Great Depression. He went to a local college, where he learned about drink and women and spent afternoons marching on the football field with the ROTC platoon. Then the United States entered World War II, and Fussell's life changed irrevocably. His account of serving as an infantry officer in the army is one of the most sordid and compelling war memoirs in recent years. Seriously wounded in battle, he vowed during recovery that he would never take orders again. His newly subversive sensibility would color all his later experiences as student, professor, and distinguished cultural commentator. This powerful memoir is a profoundly thoughtful portrait of America in the second half of this century. Recommended for all library collections.‘Michael Coleman, Alabama Regional Lib. for Blind and Physically Handicapped, Montgomery
War as a crucible of character: that is the theme of this searching, courageous memoir from Fussell, a National Book Award winner for The Great War and Modern Memory. Fussell, who grew up in the "highly privileged suburb" of Pasadena, Calif., was called to active duty in May 1943. Sent later that year to Europe as a 19-year-old Army infantry officer, he engaged in combat numerous times and, in March 1945, suffered shrapnel wounds in southeastern France. War began to change Fussell when, days after his arrival, he saw his first bodies: "My boyish illusions, largely intact to that moment of awakening, fell away all at once, and suddenly I knew that I was not and would never be in a world that was reasonable or just." When Fussell returned home after the war, he resolved "that I was finished with coercion and murder forever." That decision led him to academia, where he could enjoy a relatively unfettered life and independence of mind. Fussell traces the effects of war on his later activities, covering his personal life, his teaching and his writing. Experiences of a half century ago continue to haunt the author: "sometimes," he confesses, "I waste time devising wild schemes of revenge against the Germans." The primary focus here, however, is on those experiences themselves, presented in unflinching prose as Fussell offers a moving testimony to the indelible place of WWII in the life not only of one man, but of a generation. Photos not seen by PW. Author tour. (Oct.)
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