**The second volume in Siegfried Sassoon's beloved trilogy, *The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston*, with a new introduction by celebrated historian Paul Fussell** A highly decorated English soldier and an acclaimed poet and novelist, Siegfried Sassoon won fame for his trilogy of fictional
The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston 2 - Memoirs of an Infantry Officer
β Scribed by Sassoon, Siegfried
- Book ID
- 109248413
- Publisher
- Penguin Books
- Year
- 1930
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 191 KB
- Series
- Complete Memoirs of George Sherston 2; Penguin Classics
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781101598924
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The second volume of Siegfried Sassoon's semiautobiographical George Sherston trilogy picks up shortly after Memoirs of a Fox-hunting Man: in 1916, with the young Sherston deep in the trenches of WWI. For his decorated bravery, and also his harmful recklessness, he is soon sent to the Fourth Army School for officer training, then dispatched to Morlancourt, a raid, and on through the Somme. After being wounded by a bullet through the lung, he returns home to convalesce, where his questioning of the war and the British Military establishment leads him to write a public anti-war letter (verbatim the letter Sassoon wrote in 1917, entitled "Finished with the War: A Soldiers Declaration", which was eventually read in the British House of Commons). Through the help of close friend David Cromlech (based on Sassoon's friend Robert Graves) a medical board decides not to prosecute, but instead deem him to be mentally ill, suffering from shell-shock, and sends him to a hospital for treatment. Sassoon's stunning portrayal of a mind coming to terms with the brutal truths he has encountered in waras well as his unsentimental, though often poetic, portrayal of class-defined life in England at wartimeis amongst the greatest books ever written about World War I, or war itself.
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**The second volume in Siegfried Sassoonβs beloved trilogy,_The Complete Memoirs of George Sherston_ , with a new introduction by celebrated historian Paul Fussell** A highly decorated English soldier and an acclaimed poet and novelist, Siegfried Sassoon won fame for his trilogy of fictionaliz
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In this first novel of the semiautobiographical George Sherston trilogy, Sassoon wonderfully captures the vanishing idylls of the Edwardian English countryside. Never out of print since its original publication in 1928, when it won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, Sassoon's reminiscences about c