Under Fire (novel)
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Under Fire: The Story of a Squad | |
Author | Henri Barbusse |
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Original title | Le Feu: journal d'une escouade |
Translator | Robin Buss |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Genre(s) | War Novel |
Publication date | 1917 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 304 pp |
ISBN | ISBN 1426415761 |
Under Fire: The Story of a Squad (French: Le Feu: journal d'une escouade) by Henri Barbusse, published in 1917, was one of the first novels about the Great War to be published. Although it is a piece of fiction, the novel was based on Barbusse's own war experiences.
Contents |
[edit] Summary and style
The novel takes the form of journal-like anecdotes which the unnamed narrator claims to be writing to record his time in the war. It follows a squad of French volunteer soldiers on the front in France after the German invasion. The book opens and ends with broad visions shared by multiple characters, but beyond these the action of the novel takes place entire in occupied France.
The anecdotes are episodic in nature, each with an individual chapter title. The best-known chapter, "The Fire" (Le feu) shares the French-language title of the book. It describes a trench assault from the Allied (French) trench across No-Man's Land into the German trench.
In contrast to many war novels which came before it, Under Fire described war in gritty and brutal realism. It is noted for its realistic descriptions of death in war and the squalid trench conditions.
[edit] Publication and reception
Barbusse wrote Le feu while he was still enlisted. He claimed to have taken notes for the novel while still in the trenches; after being injured and reassigned from the front, he wrote and published the novel while working at the War Office in 1916[1].
Critical reception of the book was mixed at its publication. Its unique position of being published before the end of the war -- the so-called "war book boom" took place only in the 1920's -- led to its being well-known and widely-read. Jacques Bertillon referred to Barbusse as a "moral witness [...] with a story to tell and re-tell"[1].
Like many war novels, however, Under Fire was criticised for fictionalizing details of the war. Jean Norton Cru, who was commissioned to critique French literature of the First World War, called Under Fire "a concoction of truth, half-truth, and total falsehood"[2].
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ a b Barbusse, Henri [1917] (2003). Under Fire, Winter, Jay (introduction), Penguin Classics (in French (English translation)), New York: Penguin Books.
- ^ Cru, Jean Norton (1976). War Books: a Study in Historical Criticism (in French (English translation)). San Diego: San Diego St. University Press.