The Spanish Civil War entranced a generation of artists, writers and activists, all of whom recognised that what was being played out in the plains of Andalucía and the streets of Barcelona, was a portent for what was coming globally. So it goes…įor Whom The Bell Tolls - Ernest Hemingway A bewitching and maddening text, it takes the Dresden bombings of 1945 as its starting point and in the subsequent pages and through the eyes of its time-travelling protagonist Billy Pilgrim, eloquently demonstrates the ridiculousness of war. If Edwin Starr’s powerful War has a literary corollary it’s probably Kurt Vonnegut’s iconic Slaughterhouse-Five. Shakespeare was perceptive enough to see the tragedy and revulsion of war early on (a theme that is particularly acute in part three) a shame that we haven’t learned much in the intervening centuries. Shakespeare’s three plays that make up his Henry VI trilogy – known as Harry the Sixth, The Houses of York and Lancaster and The True Tragedy of the Duke of York – cover the period of the War of the Roses. This results in a comical tour-de-force that upon publication in 1961 was quickly embraced by the burgeoning counterculture. Again, Heller writes from a unique vantage point – he flew 60 missions during 1944. Such was the potency of Joseph Heller’s sparkling satirical novel about the 256th squadron in World War II that its title has passed over into common usage for a no-win situation. As Austerlitz attempts to come to terms with the fate of his parents, the book deals in themes of loss, memory and hope. Jacques Austerlitz is a successful architect in the Sixties who managed to flee Czechoslovakia before the outbreak of war in 1939. The reality he encounters is somewhat different as Remarque describes a generation ‘destroyed by war’.Īusterlitz isn’t about the nitty gritty of war – the fighting, the bombings, the violent deaths – but its aftermath. The book’s central character, Paul Bäumer, is, like many in Germany and likewise in Britain, enthusiastic about his forthcoming adventure. Written by a veteran of the First World War, it recounts in horrific and spellbinding detail the real life experience of war.
Just don’t expect to read it in one – or seven sittings: when first published it ran to 1,225 pages.Īll Quiet on the Western Front - Erich Maria Remarque
Set during the 1812 invasion of Russia by Napoleon’s forces, War and Peace demonstrates a rigorous historical approach to writing and is hailed as incredibly authentic – unsurprising given that Tolstoy served in the Crimean War. War and Peace is inarguably one of the greatest books of all time – it also happens to be about war, conflict and its impact upon all involved. It was made into a film by Ang Lee, which flopped mainly due to its experimental 120fps framerate rather than its faithful adaptation of the source material. Can Bravo Company live up to their star billing when they embark on a tour back home? A brave, compelling book that doesn’t flinch from portraying the uncomfortable realities of war. The skirmish is caught on camera, ensuring that Billy and his buddies become overnight heroes in America. What follows is the 30 greatest war novels (ok, 29, one is an account of a writer’s direct experience of war) (hang on, 28, one is a play) (and a few of them are semi-autobiographical – do we knock half off the total for each of them?) ever penned.īilly Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk - Ben Fountainīen Fountain’s mesmeric debut novel concerns the fortunes of Bravo Company, and in particular one of its members, the titular Billy Lynn, after its engaged in a bloody battle with Iraqi insurgents. Some focus on the fighting and the treacherous conditions experienced by the soldiers others examine how wars change people and society. Wars, battles and struggles have provided novelists with a cavalcade of inspiration for grand works. Writers, while not disavowing the sentiment, might suggest otherwise. Most reasonable people would probably concur with Edwin Starr’s bold statement that war was good for absolutely nothing.