They are all gone now,
the combat veterans of World War One. The last one, Claude Choules, who
served in the British Royal Navy, died in May this year, aged 110. The
battlefields themselves are also all but gone now, or turned into carefully
tended monuments. And in a couple of years we stand before the 100
year Anniversary of the outbreak of this war, a war that could very well be
the most momentous event in European history since the fall of Western Rome.
"The Beauty and The
Sorrow" is a book on the Great War. And it is a historical work - I am after
all a historian, and I have been teaching this subject at Uppsala University
- but it's a historical work with a twist.
In this book you as a reader will follow twenty real
people - pretty unknown or now forgotten - among them an Australian woman
who drove a lorry for the Serbian Army; an Italian soldier who ended up in a
Mental Asylum; a French civil servant who never saw the front; a German
school girl who grew up close to the war on the eastern borders of Germany;
a South American adventurer who fought for the Turks and witnessed the
Armenian genocide; a Belgian fighter pilot; a Russian nurse; an American
field surgeon; a Hungarian cavalryman; a British winner of the VC etc. The
main source material is diaries, letters and memoirs these persons have left
behind.
The book consists of short chapters, only a couple of
pages long, where I try and give a picture of what one of these persons did
or saw or felt during a single day.
(All in all 227 chapters.) These chapters then follow one another in a
simple chronological manner, starting in August 1914 and ending - no
surprise there - in November 1918.
I like to think of it as a sort collective diary, or
twenty intersecting, intertwined biographies. But that sounds more fancy
than it actually is.
My intention with this book is not in the first place to
show the Great War as an Historical Event - there are scores of books that
does this, and in an admirable way: there is no grand narrative to be found
here. What I have been aiming for is mainly the war as a human experience,
trying to capture the bewildering and complex multiplicity of war - not
least when it comes the actions and reactions of the individuals.
Some general facts The books was
first published in Sweden, in november 2008. It has since been sold to
sixenteen countries, including USA, The UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain,
Russia, Poland, Holland, Denmark. South Korea and Brazil. The US
edition is published by Alfred E Knopf in New York, the UK edition by
Profile Books in London. The UK edition is 532 pages long, is illustrated with 66 photos.
The book is now available both in the USA and the UK and I'm glad to say it
has received very favourable reviews. For instance, it was named as one of
ten best books of the year in Washington Post, San Fransisco Chronicle and
New York Daily News.
Here are some other reactions:
-
“Intense and bighearted . . . The best books about
World War I have often been oblique, like Paul Fussell’s Great War
and Modern Memory, or novels, like Erich Maria Remarque’s All
Quiet on the Western Front, rather than comprehensive histories.
Englund’s volume joins an unconventional pantheon . . . The accounts of
[these] lives can be terrifying or stirring, but are most fully alive in
Englund’s accumulation of small moments, stray details . . . His book
has the most devastating ending I can remember in a piece of nonfiction.”
— The New York Times
-
“In four decades of studying war, I’ve never read such a remarkable
book . . . Twenty lives, told in parallel, convey the war’s complexity
better than any of the grand histories so far written . . . What makes
these characters so extraordinary is their eloquence. Englund knits
their achingly evocative accounts into a riveting diary of war. He fills
in the gaps with background research but grafts this onto his characters’
testimony so seamlessly that it seems as if the narrative is theirs, not
his.” — Washington Post
-
“Powerful and compelling . . . Of the many books about
the First World War this is among the most strikingly original . . .
Almost every page of Englund’s book is fresh and revelatory.” — Daily
Express
-
“Englund frees individual experience from the collective cloak of
history and geography [in] this extraordinary book . . . The details
build like a symphony.” — Mail on Sunday
-
“Though the beauty in "The Beauty and the Sorrow" may be fleeting,
overwhelmed by extraordinary loss, Englund has brought back to life,
on the page, a small group of people who endured that loss,
resurrecting them in both simple and eloquent testimonials. That, in
and of itself, is a beautiful tribute." — San
Fransisco Chronicle
-
"By turns pithy, lyrical, colourful, poignant and
endlessly absorbing. An exquisite book."
—
Kirkus Reviews (starred)
-
"A brilliant feat of retrospective journalism"
—
Publishers Weekly (starred)
-
“The Beauty and the Sorrow is history in the raw, an
unconventional look at the war that did so much to shape the last
century . . . Englund succeeds admirably in conveying these [individual]
takes . . . He gives us a profoundly evenhanded sense of how global the
conflict was . . . He has uncovered the stories of a myriad of
fascinating characters . . . There are many quietly powerful moments.”
—
Boston Globe
-
"Whether considered as history or as literature - it is, of course,
both - The Beauty and the Sorrow is radically original in form
and epic in scope --- It seems to me that it’s not only a new way of
doing history, it’s a new way of giving form to people’s lives without
relying on the, I find, increasingly weary conventions of novelisation.
But in terms of the prose, the visualisation of scenes and the
imaginative rendering of documented events, it’s very novelistic."
—
Geoff Dyer
The Beauty and
the Sorrow - FAQ |