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The Last Soldiers of the King: Life in Wartime Italy, 1943-1945
 
 
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The Last Soldiers of the King: Life in Wartime Italy, 1943-1945 [Paperback]

Eugenio Corti (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 14, 2003

 

In the sequel to the highly acclaimed Few Returned, Eugenio Corti, one of Italy’s most distinguished postwar writers, continues his poignant account of his experiences as an Italian soldier in the Second World War. In the earlier book, Corti, a twenty-one-year-old lieutenant of artillery, recounts the horrifying experience of the soldiers who were sent to Russia to fight alongside their German ally. On the River Don, the Red Army surrounded Corti and the other members of the Italian force. Of the 30,000 men in the Thirty-fifth Corps, Corti was one of only an estimated 4,000 soldiers to survive the ordeal. Mussolini’s dreams of empire were shattered, and his ill-fated Eighth Army no longer existed.
In 1943, after recurrent military defeats, the Italian government and its king, Victor Emmanuel III, forced Mussolini to resign. Italy then signed an armistice with the Allies and ended its alliance with Germany. The Germans immediately occupied northern Italy, which the Axis still held, and reinstated Mussolini in the north. Some Italians remained loyal to fascism; many others aligned themselves with the Allies, who were now advancing in southern Italy. Corti’s sympathies were with the Allies, and after a harrowing escape from the German-occupied north, he rejoined the Italian Army fighting on the side of the king. The Last Soldiers of the King is Corti’s account of the Italian Army’s experiences fighting the Germans during the remainder of the war.
In this unforgettable narrative, Corti depicts the war from the perspective of the average Italian soldier, capturing its boredom and absurdity along with brief periods of savagery, terror, and death. Painting vivid pictures of the sights, sounds, and smells of war, he shows how these men fought alongside the Allies against the Germans. They fought without hatred, driven by a sense of duty and love for their country and a desire to quickly put an end to a war that was destroying so many lives. Corti superbly relates the wandering of the remnant of Italian officers and men as they sought to reestablish themselves as Italian soldiers. The Last Soldiers of the King tells the story of a proud people forced to endure death, poverty, and the virtual destruction of their nation.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Translated by Manuela Arundel. Foreword by Carlo D' Este.

About the Author

 

Eugenio Corti was born in Besana Brianza, Italy, in 1921. He marked his debut as a writer with Few Returned and went on to write major works of historical fiction. One of his most recent books has been published in English as The Red Horse.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 344 pages
  • Publisher: University of Missouri; 1 edition (November 14, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826214916
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826214911
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 5.9 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,744,805 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Return of the Italian Soldier-Philosopher, July 21, 2007
By 
Mr. Truthteller (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Last Soldiers of the King: Life in Wartime Italy, 1943-1945 (Paperback)
"The Last Soldiers of the King" is a continuation of an Italian soldier's memoirs of World War II, which he first related in "Few Returned".

The first work, "Few Returned", was the author's reminiscences of fighting as a young lieutenant in the Italian Army side by side with the Germans against a common foe, the Soviets on the Eastern Front as the Germans and Italians retreated during December 1942 - January 1943. That work was suffused with philosophical musings about the state of man juxtaposed with the state of war, interspersed with misgivings about having Nazis as allies and recollections from his diary about this time in his life.

The second work, "The Last Soldiers of the King", provides additional insight into life as an Italian soldier in World War II after King Victor Emmanuel gave Mussolini his walking papers in July 1943 and, in effect, placed Mussolini under house arrest. (Nazi commando Otto Skorzeny subsequently famously rescued Mussolini and brought him to Germany.) When Italy capitulated to the Allies shortly thereafter the few German forces in Italy became occupation troops as the Germans invaded the northern portion of the country. In the meantime, the Italian Army had essentially disbanded, some joining the Nazis in the north and some fleeing to the south (along with the King, who had left no instructions for the defense of Rome upon his departure).

The new government formed a new army: the "Corpo Italiano di Liberazione" (Italian Liberation Army). Author Eugenio Corti, who had fled south with other Italian Army soldiers, became a member of artillery and anti-aircraft units in the Italian Liberation Army. He infuses his accounts of his experiences in this new army with his Christian faith and the sometimes nettlesome demands that faith put on him, e.g., he struggled, albeit successfully, against the sexual promiscuity, and prostitution, that were the hallmarks of the experiences of other soldiers.

He never seems to lose his faith in God, arguing that belief in God acts as a temporizing force on the conduct and nature of warfare. He also never seems to lose his patriotism or faith in Italy, despairing at the defeatism evident in many of his fellow soldiers and countrymen. (He discovers, much to his dismay, that many, if not most, Italians are not even aware that there are any regular Italian forces fighting the Germans after Italy surrenderd to the Allies in September 1943.)

As a Christian he believes that fascism in any form, including Nazism (which he argues was a misguided racial offshoot of socialism), and communism (which he especially decries as evil) are wrong. He also appears to be conflicted in his feelings toward Jews, on the one hand blaming them for Marxism (and hence communism) and on the other hand stating compassion for them as victims of World War II.

The book is an interesting look at the last two years of World War II in Italy, through the faith-based perspective of an Italian patriot and soldier.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Italy's war to save itself 1943-1945, July 31, 2007
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This review is from: The Last Soldiers of the King: Life in Wartime Italy, 1943-1945 (Paperback)
I really enjoyed Corti's book about the Italian retreat from the Russian Front and I wanted to know more of what became of him after it.
Last Soldiers of the King, gave me more of the same and tied up loose ends for me.
Being interested in the history and actions of the Italian Army in WW2, this book sheds light on the Italian contribution to the Allies cause from 1943 on and the whole situation for Italy as a country at that time.
Like his first book, there is not a lot of combat depicted here, but what he does detail, shows the reader what it was like to fight in Italy.
Corti again, does a very good job of showing national differences in military and attitudes of the combatants.
He does play a fair hand to all involved and while the first book had many instances of the German disdain/mistreatmment of the Italians and the hard feelings of Italians towards the Germans, this book does show Cortis respect to the German soldier.
You also get a glimpse of the relationships between the British, Americans and Italians.
To me, the one drawback of this last book are the long passages related to religion.
Corti seems to be a very religious person and occasionally that comes through like a lecture in this book.
But through it all, you can feel what a long hard struggle the battle for Italy was and the post-war strife looming on the horizon.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Contains History, But Is Not About History, September 11, 2010
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This review is from: The Last Soldiers of the King: Life in Wartime Italy, 1943-1945 (Paperback)
"The Last Soldiers of the King" by E. Corti is a narrative about the author's experiences as an Italian soldier in the waning days of WWII.

Other reviewers have noted that the book is interesting, but (at least in their view) perhaps overdoes the religious material a bit.

I haven't read Corti's previous book, "Few Returned" about the Axis retreat from the Soviet Union after their humiliating and disastrous defeat on the Eastern Front, but I have read Corti's masterpiece, "The Red Horse". It was "The Red Horse" that inspired me to buy "The Last Soldiers..." and, in a balanced world, would have won the Nobel Prize for Literature.

In my opinion, "The Last Soldiers..." is primarily about the sharp distinction between the nominally Christian Brits et. al, Americans and Italians, and the atheist Germans and Soviets. That was certainly the main point of "The Red Horse" and, it seems to fit "The Last Soldiers..." as well. The historical narrative, which Corti does beautifully, is but background to the foreground of his incisive observations of the impact of Christianity on culture and perhaps especially on cultures at war. One could, in fact, make similar observations today and contrast the treatment of both innocents and combatants in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other (apparently less newsworthy) conflicts around the world.

This is not to say that "The Last Soldiers..." is a religious book. Far from it. It is a historical narrative. But religion was, in the eyes of the author, the primary cultural difference that influenced the horrific violations of human rights by the Germans and the Soviets and the rather more humane (if not perfect) treatment of civilians and prisoners by the Commonwealth, American, and Italian armies... despite the fact that the Germans and Italians were both Axis powers and the Russians were part of the Allied coalition.

I give it five stars, easily.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IN EARLY JUNE 1944, Italy was divided into two opposing halves: the north occupied by the Germans, the south by the British and Americans. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
reorganization camp, rear zone, traffic coordinator
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Marco, Lance Corporal Freddi, San Ginesio, Antonio Moroni, Colonel Giaccone, Maugham Brown, Major Pelaformiche, Sixteenth Battalion, Villa Consalvi, Virgin Mary, Captain Zuntini, Christmas Eve, Antonio Castelli, Eighth Army, Folgore Combat Group, General Morigi, Gothic Line, Red Army, Sixth Group, Captain Bevilacqua, Don Romano, Fourteenth Battalion, Nembo Division, Red Cross, Santa Maria
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