Generals Die in Bed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Generals Die in Bed is a 1930 anti-war novel by the Canadian-American writer Charles Yale Harrison. Based on the author's own experiences in combat, it tells the story of a young soldier fighting in the trenches of World War I.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

[edit] Thematic analysis

At the core of Generals Die in Bed is the thesis that war is a futile and bloody endeavour in which men fight fruitlessly for ideals that turn out to be meaningless. Newspapers and "fighting parsons" spew patriotic slogans about "our" side in the war, without any sense of how horrible and traumatic trench warfare really is. Set up as brave and unconquerable heroes, the Canadian infantrymen turn out to be nervous, under-trained, inexperienced boys who enlisted without a fair sense of what they were getting into. Like the poetry of Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon, or such European novels as Henri Barbusse's Under Fire, Generals Die in Bed attempts to strip war of its romance and glamour, to show the real experiences of men at war. Harrison's depiction of the juxtaposition between beleaguered privates and their incompetent generals is basically a socialist argument about how the exploitation of the working classes in civilian life translates into the exploitation of rank-and-file soldiers in the military.

[edit] Reception after publication

Generals Die in Bed was an international bestseller upon its release, and was by far the most successful of Harrison's novels. The reception was lukewarm in Canada, however, because of scenes depicting Canadian soldiers looting the French town of Arras and shooting unarmed Germans (which amounted to a war crime). Former Canadian Expeditionary Force commander General Sir Arthur Currie, said that the novel denigrated the legacy of Canadians in the war. Harrison denied the allegation in a 1930 interview with the Toronto Star, praising Canadian soldiers and justifying his novel as an attempt to depict the war "as it really was."

After its initial success as part of the "war book boom" of the late twenties and early thirties, Generals Die in Bed was largely forgotten, until the Hamilton, Ontario publisher Potlach reissued it in the 1970s. In 2002 Toronto's Annick Press adapted Generals Die in Bed into a children's novel, and further editions by Penguin Books Australia and Red Fox in the UK followed.

Charles Yale Harrison wrote several other novels and non-fiction books before his death in 1954.

[edit] See also