

ESSAY: Novelist James Jones Showed Grace in the Face of Hemingway’s Cruelty: Hearing Hemingway’s famously nasty letter about her father read aloud in the new Burns and Novick documentary came as a rude shock. ESSAY: From Here to Eternity: Inside the Pre-War Hawaii Life That Inspired the Book & Movie (Roy Morris Jr., Autumn 2021, HistoryNet)

ESSAY: James Joyce’s divine comedy: For the Irish, atheism will always be religious (TERRY EAGLETON, 8/30/22, unHerd) Modern Library Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century See also: James Jones ( 2 books reviewed)īrothers Judd Top 100 of the 20th Century: Novels

Personally, I believe this is one of the top 10 books of the Century. Struggle between individualism & patriotic conformity is nowhere better & require conformity & obedience to certain standards. Institutions and the authorities who run them tend to grind down individuals But at the same time, the weight of these Other countries and regard institutions with more reverence, preciselyīecause they are full participants along with their fellow citizens in Idea of becoming an officer) serves to highlight a broader question.Ĭitizens of a democracy are perhaps even more patriotic than citizens of In addition, Prewitt's dilemma (and Milt Warden's wrestling with the Us with a loving, but disturbing, portrait of the Army just before With authority overwhelm his love of the Army and ruin him. The Company because he blinded a sparring partner). Prewitt's dilemma is that he loves the Army & loves being a soldier,īut he keeps running into problems with his superiors (he quit the BugleĬorps when someone else was unjustly made 1st Bugle and he won't box for Lee Prewitt is an Army Private in 1941 Hawaii, an ex-boxerĪnd ex-bugler and potentially a great soldier except for the fact that How to balance freedom and individualism with authority & patriotism. One of the central quandries that confront us as citizens in a democracy: Thin Red Line and Whistle), but I think it can best be read as partįlew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Cool Hand Luke. This National Book Award winner is actually a part of a trilogy (along
