
On War and Writing
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Samuel Hynes knows war personally: he served as a Marine Corps pilot in the Pacific Theater during World War II, receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross. He has spent his life balancing two careers: pilot and professor of literature. Hynes has written a number of major works of literary criticism, as well as a war-memoir, Flights of Passage, and several books about the World Wars. His writing is sharp, lucid, and has provided some of the most expert, detailed, and empathetic accounts of a disappearing generation of fighters and writers.
On War and Writing offers for the first time a selection of Hynes's essays and introductions that explore the traditions of war writing from the twentieth century to the present. Hynes takes as a given that war itself-the battlefield uproar of actual combat-is unimaginable for those who weren't there, yet we have never been able to turn away from it. We want to know what war is really like: for a soldier on the Somme; a submariner in the Pacific; a bomber pilot over Germany; a tank commander in the Libyan desert. To learn, we turn again and again to the memories of those who were there, and to the imaginations of those who weren't, but are poets, or filmmakers, or painters, who give us a sense of these experiences that we can't possibly know.
The essays in this book range from the personal (Hynes's experience working with documentary master Ken Burns, his recollections of his own days as a combat pilot) to the critical (explorations of the works of writers and artists such as Thomas Hardy, E. E. Cummings, and Cecil Day-Lewis). What we ultimately see in On War and Writing is not military history, not the plans of generals, but the feelings of war, as young men expressed them in journals and poems, and old men remembered them in later years-men like Samuel Hynes.
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Two Vocations
- At War with Ken Burns
- In the Whirl and Muddle of War
- War Stories: Myths of World War II
- A Critic Looks at War
- Hardy and the Battle-God
- Yeats's Wars
- Ignorantly into War: Vera Brittain
- Rebecca West's The Return of the Soldier
- An Introduction to Graeme West
- The Odds on Edward Thomas
- E. E. Cummings's The Enormous Room
- Cecil Lewis's Sagittarius Rising
- The Death of Landscape
- Verdun and Back: A Pilot's Log
- Index of Names and Titles
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