Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com

The Boys' Crusade

By Fussell, Paul
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Tuesday, July 1 2003
Brief, wholly memorable essays—sometimes little more than vignettes—on a season in hell.

Not for literary historian and combat veteran Fussell (Veterans, 2002, etc.) all this talk of "the greatest generation" and the mawkish military romanticism that has settled on

WWII: the young men, many scarcely more than boys, who fought against the formidable German enemy in places like Normandy and the HÜrtgen Forest were a "reluctant draftee army," their deeds usually less heroic than desperate. Building on his fine memoir Doing Battle (1996), Fussell explores the lives and actions of those boys, "who bitched freely, but seldom cried, even when wounded." Among the themes he explores, at the length of a few pages or paragraphs, are the widespread dislike for the young Americans among British civilians, who famously complained that they were "overpaid, oversexed, and over here," and even among the liberated French, "who didn't at all appreciate the immense black market in Paris run by over two thousand American deserters"; the extraordinary, and underreported, rate of desertion among those boys, traumatized by battle settings straight out of the Grimm Brothers and the constant presence of ignoble death; the carnage of battle in places like the Falaise Pocket, where, Dwight Eisenhower recalled, "It was literally possible to walk for hundreds of yards, stepping on nothing but dead and decaying flesh" (to which Fussell, ever the curmudgeon, adds, "And Eisenhower is gentleman enough not to offend . . . by dwelling on the smell"); and the general insanity of war and its fighters, torn between the "quite contradictory operations" of trying to kill some people with the greatest efficiency while trying to save others to the same high standards. Throughout, Fussell writes vividly and sardonically, sounding like the spiritual twin of Kurt Vonnegut at some points and an aggrieved Julius Caesar at others, and painting extraordinary scenes at every turn.

A bracing corrective for a literature recently dominated by Ambrose, Brokaw, and other cheerleaders, and just right for a new season of war.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • Film Rights Report
  • Thomas Leitch recommends MY JUST DESIRE, THE BOYS' CRUSADE, and MONSTER OF GOD.
  • Kirkus Reviews - September 8, 2003
  • British rulers have been cunning, treacherous, stupid, evil, beautiful and kind — and sometimes all at once. Cate Blanchett captured one especially chameleonic royal in ......
  • From Elizabethan Inner Circle To Battlefields Of Wwii Europe
  • Anna Beer looks closely at the power behind Elizabeth's throne in (Ballantine, $24.95), while Paul Fussell writes that the Americans soldiers in Europe during WWII ......
  • Battle Of The Beasts
  • In this luxurious, exuberantly over-the-top version of the Grimm Brothers' "Willow Wren and the Bear," the animals with wings and those with feet duke it ......
  • 60 second interview: David Dwight Eisenhower
  • NAME: David Dwight Eisenhower (Nickname is "Ike"-he was born in 1945, "I've been called Ike ever since I can remember.") TITLE: General manager, Gullifty's restaurant ......
  • Quote of the Day
  • "Two radical ideas have been introduced into human thought. One of them is that energy and matter are pretty much the same sort of stuff....
  • TRÈS GRIMM!
  • Producer/writer George Larkin's evening of adaptations of the Grimm brothers' fairy tales suffers from a confusion of styles, talents, and tone. The straightforward presentational format ......
  • The Lady And The Lion
  • Long's romantic, extravagantly detailed paintings provide showstopping accompaniment to this lightly reworked Grimm Brothers version of "East of the Sun and West of the Moon." ......
  • The Bremen Town Musicians
  • Zwerger's illustrations for this favorite Grimm Brothers' tale make new the story of the geriatric animal quartet setting out for Bremen to join the town ......
  • Quote of the Day
  • "When it became obvious what a dumb and cruel and spiritually and financially and militarily ruinous mistake our war in Vietnam was, every artist worth ......
  • The Astrological Diary Of God
  • Kurt Vonnegut's patchwork non-novels are the presumable inspiration for this alternately amusing and labored satire, cast in the form of a zodiacally structured commonplace-book and ......
  • Quote of the Day
  • "History is merely a list of surprises. It can only prepare us to be surprised yet again." --Kurt Vonnegut, Jr....
  • Class Worriers.
  • Kurt Vonnegut is fond of saying "be careful what you wish for because you might get it." For years, critics of CEO compensation have been ......
  • Class worriers
  • Kurt Vonnegut is fond of saying "be careful what you wish for because you might get it." For years, critics of CEO compensation have been ......
  • Astrablu picks up Betzer estate, films
  • Four years after his death, Danish producer Just Betzer's estate has been sold to Astrablu Media for an undisclosed amount. Astrablu's acquisition encompasses Betzer's Panorama ......