Literature of World War I
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World War I has inspired great novels, drama and poetry. During the war itself, it has been estimated that thousands of poems were written every day by combatants and their relatives. After the war, many participants published their memoirs and diaries.
During the war many of the combatants published trench magazines, most of them for an audience in a particular division or unit. The most famous of these (and the only one still commercially available after the war) was the Wipers Times.
A common subject for fiction in the 1920s and 1930s was the effect of the war, including shell-shock and the huge social changes caused by the war.
From the latter half of the 20th century onwards, the First World War continued to be a popular subject for fiction, mainly novels.
Novels written from personal knowledge:
- Richard Aldington: Death of a Hero
- Henri Barbusse: Le Feu
- John Dos Passos: Three Soldiers
- Jaroslav Hašek: The Good Soldier Svejk
- Ernest Hemingway: A Farewell to Arms
- Emilio Lussu: A Year on the Plateau
- Frederic Manning: Her Privates We
- W. Somerset Maugham: Spy fiction such as Ashenden
- Erich Maria Remarque: All Quiet on the Western Front
- Siegfried Sassoon: Memoirs of an Infantry Officer
- Dalton Trumbo: Johnny Got His Gun
- R.C. Sherriff and Vernon Bartlett: Journey's End
- Arnold Zweig: Education before Verdun, The Case of Sergeant Grischa
Other contemporary novels:
- John Buchan: many works including Greenmantle and The Thirty-Nine Steps
- Dorothy L. Sayers: The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club
Memoirs and Diaries:
- Edmund Blunden: Undertones of War
- Wilfred Bion: The Long Weekend 1897-1919
- Vera Brittain: Testament of Youth
- E. E. Cummings: The Enormous Room
- A. Stuart Dolden: Cannon Fodder
- Robert Graves: Goodbye to All That
- Ernst Jünger: Storm of Steel
- T. E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia"): Seven Pillars of Wisdom
- John Masefield: published diaries
- Frank Richards: Old Soldiers Never Die
- Siegfried Sassoon: published diaries
- John Terraine: General Jack's Diary
- Hans Zoeberlein: Verdun
- Ford Madox Ford: the tetralogy Parade's End
Poetry:
- Laurence Binyon: For the Fallen
- Edmund Blunden
- Rupert Brooke
- Wilfred Wilson Gibson
- Robert Graves
- Julian Grenfell
- Ivor Gurney: Severn and Somme and War's Embers
- Francis Ledwidge
- John McCrae: In Flanders' Fields
- Wilfred Owen
- Isaac Rosenberg
- Siegfried Sassoon
- Robert W. Service
- Charles Sorley
- Edward Thomas
Non-contemporary:
- Pat Barker: Regeneration, The Eye in the Door, The Ghost Road
- Sebastian Barry: A Long, Long Way
- William Boyd: An Ice-Cream War
- J. L. Carr: A Month in the Country
- Marc Dugain: The Officers' Ward
- Sebastian Faulks: Birdsong
- Timothy Findley: The Wars
- Susan Hill: Strange Meeting
- Mark Helprin: A Soldier of the Great War
- Sebastien Japrisot: A Very Long Engagement
- Jennifer Johnston: How Many Miles to Babylon?
- Frank McGuinness: Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme (play)
- Jeff Shaara: To the Last Man
- Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: August 1914