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The Boys' Crusade: The American Infantry in Northwestern Europe, 1944–1945 (2003)

di Paul Fussell

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The Boys' Crusade is the great historian Paul Fussell's unflinching and unforgettable account of the American infantryman's experiences in Europe during World War II. Based in part on the author's own experiences, it provides a stirring narrative of what the war was actually like, from the point of view of the children--for children they were--who fought it. While dealing definitively with issues of strategy, leadership, context, and tactics, Fussell has an additional purpose: to tear away the veil of feel-good mythology that so often obscures and sanitizes war's brutal essence. "A chronicle should deal with nothing but the truth," Fussell writes in his Preface. Accord-ingly, he eschews every kind of sentimentalism, focusing instead on the raw action and human emotion triggered by the intimacy, horror, and intense sorrows of war, and honestly addressing the errors, waste, fear, misery, and resentments that plagued both sides. In the vast literature on World War II, The Boys' Crusade stands wholly apart. Fussell's profoundly honest portrayal of these boy soldiers underscores their bravery even as it deepens our awareness of their experiences. This book is both a tribute to their noble service and a valuable lesson for future generations.… (altro)
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Paul Fussell’s book is an unusual contribution to the Modern Library Chronicles series. Whereas most volumes provide short introductions to their respective subjects, as other reviewers have noted, this is not a straightforward military history of the war with Germany. Instead, Fussell offers a much more idiosyncratic work, a social and cultural history of the American riflemen who fought in northwestern Europe after Normandy.

This is not to say that this book isn’t worth reading – quite the contrary. Throughout this book, Fussell dispels much of the “greatest generation” mythology cultivated in recent years by writers such as Stephen Ambrose. A veteran of the war, Fussell provides a much more complicated portrait of inexperienced young boys thrown into the chaos and violence of combat. In a series of short chapters, he covers topics ranging from the interactions with the French to the treatment of the wounded and the dead to the discovery of the work camps – all of which he addresses with the same blunt and insightful analysis that is a hallmark of his work. Anyone seeking to get a more accurate portrait of what the “good war” was really like for the men who fought in it would do well to start here. ( )
  MacDad | Mar 27, 2020 |
This was a present for my father which I subsequently took out in the backyard on a subsequent visit to read while avoiding him. This is a sad and ongoing condition.

The book is also disturbing, a sage counterpoint to the warmongering shit of Stephen Ambrose. Fussell's work puts myths to rest and reminds us of the horrific. ( )
  jonfaith | Feb 22, 2019 |
A short, brutal history of the Good War in the European Theater of Operations. Fussell is not as succinct as General Sherman in making the same point, but he does document the assertion that war is hell with statistics, first-hand accounts, and his own eperiences. ( )
  nmele | Sep 11, 2015 |
The preface made it sound remarkable; the body didn't live up to the promise. It was, I suppose, too abbreviated, in every respect. Granted he wanted it to be analytical rather than sentimental, but I think the subject might require rather more sentimentality than he seemed inclined to acknowledge. It left me with an empty, unsatisfied feeling. ( )
  drbubbles | Nov 21, 2010 |
Paul Fussell's short powerful book of linked essays about ground fighting in the European theater of World War II should be mandatory reading for future military leaders at West Point. The unbearable fear, systemic screw-ups and mangled corpses that are the daily ration of any infantry combat soldier are so vividly and personally drawn that it might give pause to any glory-lovers among the cadets who dream of conquest without blood...

Fussell still suffers lingering survivor guilt laced with an ordinary rifleman's rage -- not at the Germans but first and foremost at his officers; the U.S. government propagandists; the furiously unwelcoming French who resented being slaughtered by deliberately imprecise Allied bombing raids, and any form of patriotic coercion. In "The Boys' Crusade" he has given us the most eloquent meditation on war I have read since the World War I poets Siegfried Sassoon, Robert Graves and Edmund Blunden.

aggiunto da SnootyBaronet | modificaLos Angeles Times, Clancy Sigal
 

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Preface: Those intimate with the military and its ways have experienced the army's obsession with the Western European campaign of World War II.
When Ike Eisenhower was a boy, European history was more avidly pursued in schools than now, and it's also possible that he knew a bit about the Crusades from his own reading, if he hadn't heard about them in church - his family was pious - or at elementary or high school or even at West Point.
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The Boys' Crusade is the great historian Paul Fussell's unflinching and unforgettable account of the American infantryman's experiences in Europe during World War II. Based in part on the author's own experiences, it provides a stirring narrative of what the war was actually like, from the point of view of the children--for children they were--who fought it. While dealing definitively with issues of strategy, leadership, context, and tactics, Fussell has an additional purpose: to tear away the veil of feel-good mythology that so often obscures and sanitizes war's brutal essence. "A chronicle should deal with nothing but the truth," Fussell writes in his Preface. Accord-ingly, he eschews every kind of sentimentalism, focusing instead on the raw action and human emotion triggered by the intimacy, horror, and intense sorrows of war, and honestly addressing the errors, waste, fear, misery, and resentments that plagued both sides. In the vast literature on World War II, The Boys' Crusade stands wholly apart. Fussell's profoundly honest portrayal of these boy soldiers underscores their bravery even as it deepens our awareness of their experiences. This book is both a tribute to their noble service and a valuable lesson for future generations.

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