osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Robert Graves’ Goodbye to All That, which I really ought to have read earlier on while I was writing David and Robert (now tentatively rechristening The Larks Still Bravely Singing), but here we are! It’s probably just as well I didn’t have the temptation to insert David into the Oxford literary scene of 1920.

According to the introduction (written by Paul Fussell), this book so outraged Siegfried Sassoon that he annotated it with five thousand words of corrections. I’d love to know if Sassoon objected mostly to the things that Graves wrote about him (there’s a rather defensive chapter where Graves explains why he did everything in his power to ensure Sassoon’s “Finished with the War” declaration had no impact at all, despite agreeing with Sassoon’s sentiments) or to Graves’ approach more generally, but sadly Fussell doesn’t share.

What I’m Reading Now

Still creeping forward in Nick Lloyd’s The Western Front: A History of the Great War, 1914-1918. The tsar has now abdicated and all the other countries are a bit worried that their governments might be next if they can’t win the war before their citizens’ morale goes ker-plat (and we haven’t even gotten to the Bolshevik revolution yet!), so they yearn to finish the war with a single decisive battle… hence the never-ending sequence of fruitless offensives. They were all meant to be decisive war-ending battles.

Except when the Germans attacked Verdun, apparently, that really was just meant to be a battle of attrition, which may account for the baffling fact that the Germans only attacked one side of the river, so the French hung out on the other bank and shot at them. My God, Falkenhayn, it’s like you don’t even want to win this war.

What I Plan to Read Next

I need to take a break from World War I, in fact perhaps from all wars, and read something light and fluffy. Will the library ever get a paper copy of Sarah Rees Brennan’s latest Fence novel? I’m PINING here.

Actually, this would be a good time to read the first book in the new American Girls series. (They’ve made a 1980s girl, Courtney Moore.) I suspect this will end in yet another rant about American Girl’s tragic lapse in standards, but sometimes you just gotta fall on that sword.
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

War, superb as it is, is not necessarily a filtering process, by which men and nations may be purified. Well, there are many people to write you of the noble side, the heroic side, the exalted side of war. I must write you of what I have seen, the other side, the backwash. They are both true.


It’s all World War I all the time up in here. This week I finished Hew Strachan’s The First World War, which is an overview of the war a bit too zoomed out for what I wanted from it; I’m hoping to get a slightly closer look with Nick Lloyd’s The Western Front: A History of the Great War, 1914-1918.

I also read two war memoirs, which neatly encapsulate those two kinds of war writing. The first, showcasing the noble and heroic side of war, is E. W. Hornung’s Notes of a Camp-Follower on the Western Front, which contains some truly superb chapters about setting up a library just behind the front lines, with notes about what the troops liked to read, YES I may be considering incorporating this into a future novel. There’s a particularly fun bit about a soldier who realizes that Hornung himself is a writer, and borrows a Raffles book from the library, which he “returned… without a word to temper his forgiving smile.”

(There’s also a tragic section about visiting the grave of a young friend, which became yet more tragic when I read Hornung’s Wikipedia entry and realized that this was the grave of Hornung’s own son.)

For the backwash, we have… well, The Backwash of War by Ellen La Motte. This book was written by an American nurse serving in a French hospital and it’s so bitter that it shocked me as I read it in the year of our Lord 2021. It was banned in England and France, and in America too once America entered the war, and while I am not in favor of banning books, I can see why the war authorities recoiled. It’s not good for morale to think that if your boy is injured, he might be cared for by a hospital nurse with nothing but disdain for the patients (uncouth grotesque poilus clutching photographs of their stupid ugly wives), who seems to subscribe to the philosophy that we might as well just let the grievously wounded die already.

What I’m Reading Now

Robert Graves’ Good-bye to All That. I haven’t gotten to the war part yet. Graves is still at boarding school, where he has just confessed to the headmaster that yes, he IS in love with one of his schoolmates, and the headmaster is so bamboozled by this suicidal frankness that he decides the connection must be essentially moral after all.

What I Plan to Read Next

Lyn MacDonald’s 1915: The Death of Innocence is waiting for me at the library, and I’ve got her book The Roses of No Man’s Land, about the English nurses of World War I, coming on interlibrary loan.

After that, perhaps???? I should take a break from World War I for a bit??? Maybe now is the time to get D. K. Broster’s Flight of the Heron.

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