I subscribe to the New York Times Online. Because I now live in East Coast Florida, I could also have the print copy delivered. But I already get the Daytona Beach News-Journal delivered before dawn (usually) in a plastic bag at the end of my garage. I fetch it in my e-scooter, braving whatever elements might exist including niceness, wind, humidity, and – occasionally – rain. I pick up the paper with my handy grabber and roll back to the house. I read local news, the sports page, some national coverage. I read obits, especially on Sunday when there are pages of them.
But the NYT has the writers and global coverage that I need,
now especially, as we try to survive assaults on reality by Trump, Musk, and
their GOP bullies. Also, arts reviews, especially of new and some old books. A
few months ago, I read about John Dufresne’s new novel, “My Darling Boy.” It sounded so good and personally relevant
that I bought the e-book on Kindle (and wrote my own review here).
I read a Style-section article last June by Alyson Krueger about Miranda July
and her “rethinking of marriage and family life.” It also took me to a review
of her book. I bought and read it and indeed it is a more-than-spicy take on monogamy.
I didn’t post a review on my blog but I did come across a finished piece in my
blog files which I was too skittish to post.
This morning I read a Feb. 13 “Critic’s Notebook” piece by
Dwight Garner about the 50th anniversary of Paul Fussell’s “The
Great War and Modern Memory.” I read the book 40-some years ago and discovered the
dirty truth about The Great War of 1914-1918. Fussell explored the war I the
trenches through the eyes of Siegfried Sassoon and Robert Graves, two
combatant-writers who wrote the truth about their war. Garner writes that it
changed his view about how nonfiction should be written. It allowed me to find
those voices that I barely knew. In high school, the only poem of the era I
remember is “Rouge Bouquet” by Joyce Kilmer, poet best known for “Trees.” Kilmer
died in combat and is remembered for his formal rhymes and is considered as one
of the last poets of the Romantic era. He was swept away by the honesty and
rage in works by Sassoon and Owen and other poets of the so-called Lost
Generation.
Garner urges readers to return to Fussell’s book to find the
real story of this war that is no longer a living memory but lives on in the
work of so many powerful writers. My grandfather was a cavalry officer in
France and my grandmother a nurse with Maryland 42nd Field Hospital.
The dismounted cavalry officer spent a limited time in the trenches and my
grandmother repaired the wounds of tr5ench warfare. Neither recalled for us war’s
horror. Neither did my World War 2 vet father, who saw action in France, Belgium,
and Germany. They left that up to their children and grandchildren in
wars-to-come. Those wars have given us great literature and have very little to
do with stopping the slaughter.
For me, I have written two novels about the aftermath of the
Great War in the U.S., mainly Colorado. I am publishing them myself. I know nothing
of war except what I read and see in movies and what I conjure in my
imagination. Draftees of Vietnam have done their best to tell it like it is. We
read about the senseless slaughter of what Robert Stone called “a mistake
10,000 miles long.” Maybe we learn and maybe we don’t. But books such as
Fussell’s can give us glimpses into humankind’s dirtiest business.
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