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Frederic Manning

    Cet auteur est célébré pour sa profonde représentation des expériences de guerre, capturant la réalité brute et non filtrée de la vie dans les tranchées. Son œuvre majeure, initialement publiée anonymement, explore le poids psychologique du conflit et la résilience de l'esprit humain. Louvé pour sa voix authentique et sa description sans concession de la camaraderie et du sacrifice, le roman est considéré comme un jalon de la littérature de guerre. Les critiques soulignent son exceptionnel mérite littéraire et ses aperçus durables sur l'expérience du soldat.

    Soldat Nr. 19022
    Fino all'ultimo uomo
    The Middle Parts of Fortune
    • The Middle Parts of Fortune

      Somme & Ancre, 1916

      War is waged by men; not by beasts, or by gods. It is a peculiarly human activity. Originally published in 1929 anonymously under the pen name Private 19022, The Middle Parts of Fortune follows ordinary soldiers as they fight to survive in the trenches of a raging war. It was revised and published again in wider circulation in 1930. The book details the brutalities of the soldier's experiences and their internal struggles, as well as the raw complexities of human interaction when comradeship and conflict collide. Most of the book's events are filtered through the main character Bourne, who is enigmatic and detached and considered to be a self-portrait of the author. Frederic Manning was an Australian poet and novelist who died in 1935. He had fought in the Battle of the Somme in 1916 during the first World War, and his war experiences allowed him to infuse his characters and their perspectives with authenticity and fragility. While the subject matter may be bleak and grim, Manning's writing is fluid and striking in its description. Beloved by T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, and Ernest Hemingway, who called it a noble novel, The Middle Parts of Fortune is regarded as a classic war novel.

      The Middle Parts of Fortune
      5,0
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      • 345pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      In un romanzo considerato un capolavoro della letteratura di guerra, la battaglia della Somme, una delle più terribili carneficine della storia, rivive attraverso gli occhi del soldato semplice Bourne, alter ego dell’autore. L’attenzione è tutta rivolta agli uomini che combattono e muoiono, che marciano fino allo sfinimento, tormentati dai parassiti e dal sudiciume, che attendono nelle retrovie. Le imprecazioni, i pensieri, la paura non concedono nulla all’idealizzazione della vita militare. Il risultato è un profondo, sincero ritratto del soldato semplice di fronte alla terribile prova della guerra. Della Grande guerra e di ogni guerra.

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