Reviews
Gandal's study is enlightening and will be a valuable resource for studying the Great War.
[Gandal] shows how unsatisfactory wartime experiences informed the fiction of a range of writers, including William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway, both of whom lied about their military roles in later years.
The book is correct to claim that future scholars of Great War American literature will have to take these different military classifications into account. Combatants and noncombatants did experience service differently, just as soldiers who fought in the trenches experienced battle differently from those who did not. And just as importantly, Gandal's book should also be praised for bringing back into the light of day several excellent primary texts that have sadly sunk into obscurity.
Gandal's latest effort provide[s] needed extended analysis into a complicated war... Although Gandal offers insights into women writers of the period, as well as African American writers such as Victor Daly, it is the combatant/noncombatant paradox that drives the book, resulting in a much more complex reading and history of American Great War literature than in traditional analyses.
Gandal suggests that the conventional binary classification of World War I literature as either pro- or antiwar has in fact distracted us from signal differences between combatant and noncombatant experiences of war.... Gandal persuasively reads A Farewell to Arms, together with other major modernist works, as validating the particular resentments and disappointments of a vast audience of veterans who served in noncombatant roles rather than as speaking to the comparatively few American soldiers who actually served in combat during this conflict. The caste system elevating combat roles, on the one hand, over combat support and combat service support functions, on the other, persists today in the US military...
A sweeping reassessment of American First World War writing, War Isn’t the Only Hell is simply brilliant, as packed with original insights, masterful close readings, and successful challenges to critical orthodoxy as any book I’ve ever read.
The canon of World War I literature, along with scholarship on the Lost Generation and modern war literature more generally, will have to be rethought in light of Keith Gandal’s new study of what it means to go to war and to write passionately about it. Multiple ambiguities and new resonances in the meaning of service, combat, bravery, and trauma emerge in this exhilarating reinterpretation.
Gandal brilliantly challenges old interpretations of post–World War I literature and presents a much more complex understanding of the experience of combatant versus noncombatant. Gandal’s excellent work includes a study of gender, race, and class, as well as issues of validation, alienation, disillusionment, maculation, and the US Army’s new meritocracy system represented in the works of 13 prominent authors.
War Isn't the Only Hell shows how the experience of enlistment and army life impacted the writing of familiar canonical authors, like Hemingway, but also writers whose work is less familiar, including Ellen La Motte and Victor Daly. Gandal provides readings of these texts that illuminate them individually and collectively and uses them to, in turn, shine a light on a crucial moment in American culture. After reading Gandal, you will want to go out and (re)read all the books he mentions.
Exceptionally well-written, War Isn’t the Only Hell combines razor-sharp historical and literary analysis to offer a startlingly original interpretation of Lost Generation literature. Keith Gandal recasts this extraordinary moment of literary creativity as a societal-wide mediation on the American way of war. In the process, he transforms World War I, a long-forgotten American war, into a major cultural touchstone.
World War I transformed the United States, and along with it the lives of millions of American citizens. Challenging longstanding interpretations of the Lost Generation, Keith Gandal exposes us to a diverse array of writers—white and black, male and female, combatants and noncombatants—to demonstrate the full totality of the American war experience. Seamlessly merging close literary analysis with critical historical context, War Isn’t the Only Hell is a landmark study.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I
1. Noncombatant Mobilization Wounds
2. The Horrors of War Mobilization
3. Saved by French Arrest and Imprisonment
4. Hemingway's Thrice-Told Tale
Part II
5. The
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I
1. Noncombatant Mobilization Wounds
2. The Horrors of War Mobilization
3. Saved by French Arrest and Imprisonment
4. Hemingway's Thrice-Told Tale
Part II
5. The Mobilization of Young Women
6. "A Miracle So Wide"
Part III
7. A War Hero in an Antiwar Tale?
8. The Intimate Seductions of Meritocracy
9. Not Only What You Would Expect
10. Too Glorifying to Tell
Conclusion
Notes
Index