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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Keystone of a monumental trilogy, August 21, 2002
I have always liked the James Jones trilogy of the war era army-- "From Here to Eternity" "The Thin Red Line" "Whistle""From Here to Eternity" details in unmatched accuracy what the pre-Pearl Harbor professional army was like for the enlisted man. "The Thin Red Line" carries that army and those men into combat in the Solomons with the same honesty and intensity. "Whistle" takes men wounded in combat home via hospital ship and stateside rehabilitation center. Most people have heard of "From Here to Eternity" and "The Thin Red Line" because they have been made into movies. "Whistle," the concluding, and in many ways the most important volume of the trilogy, is less known. Jones has always dwelt in the shadow of the more famous Norman Mailer. But I have always thought of Mailer as poseur who wrote what he wrote in order to be accepted into literary society and become famous. Jones has always seemed to me the real deal. He enlisted in the army in 1939, was at Pearl Harbor when the Japs attacked, fought in the Solomons, receiving the Bronze Star with V for Valor and the Purple Heart. With the money he made from "From Here to Eternity," Jones founded a writer's colony and paid the hospital bills of the great and tragic poet Delmore Schwartz, who clearly influenced Jones' writing. See especially the poem "For the One Who Would Take Man's Life in His Hands" from the collection "Summer Knowledge" published in 1938. As far as I know, no critic has ever noticed this, but the first stanza of this poem in 12 lines gives the storyline of "From Here to Eternity." The second stanza gives that of "The Thin Red Line," and the third and final stanza that of "Whistle." Jones carried out something remarkable, getting the vision for a monumental literary undertaking from a poem he read as an enlisted man in a garrison army, actually carrying out the vision and producing what, in my opinion, is the definitive American fictional narrative of the war. In short, Jones turned his life into a poem and that poem into splendid novels. I stand in awe.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fiction?, October 27, 2004
It's difficult to write a book about soldiers at war. There are always many characters, the ranks are confusing, the description of the battles must be very accurate otherwise the reader will be lost. If it's fiction, the author must be very careful not to, unwillingly, transform his book in a re-telling of other, more commonly known battle events. James Webb managed to write a very good book about soldiers at war, "Fields of fire". Cornelius Ryan wrote a series of excellent non-fiction books about the second World War in its European Theatre.
"The thin red line" is about the battle of Guadalcanal, an island of the Solomons chain and an important base in the south Pacific Ocean, between the american and the japanese troops.
"The thin red line", by author and ex-combatent James Jones, was brought under the spotlights once again more recently after cult director Terrence Mallik transposed it to the big screen, for the second time, in 1998 (the first time was in 1964). The movie is visually beautiful, long, and insightful, with extraordinary development of its main characters. The book does not have visual resources, but Jones' fast prose, moving from character to character, from battle scenes to the long nights spent in the open, all this makes the reader "watch" what is happening with his or her mind, just like it was a movie.
Jones knows what he is writing about. He was there, he did that. And he is intelligent. War battles are not much different, one from another (except if you are actually there, of course). So, Jones technic is to write unusually long chapters, to make the reader feel involved with the environment, with the people of C-for-Charlie Company. All the characters, with no exception, have, contrary to the chapters, unusually short names - four or five letters at most. Witt, Fife, Bell, Dale, Stein, Tall, Bosch, Bead, Gaff, just one syllabe, they are easy to remember and their sonority makes the reader instantly recognize the person associated to the name. Also, the brevity of the names reminds us of the brevity of the lives of his characters, fighting unexpected death at every moment.
"The thin red line" is fiction, but barely. The last sentence of the book gives Jones away. It's fiction in the sense of characters ann their development, and building atmosphere. It is very good fiction, really a masterpiece. And it's a true account on the horrors of war. Fiction and truth, ballanced. Enjoy both parts.
Grade 9.0/10
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32 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Skip the film, read this book, and be absorbed, October 1, 1999
By A Customer
In a word - incredible. Terrence Malick's sketchy, loooong, underdeveloped movie does not do this classic justice. If you care about the WW II soldier, what this generation did for ours, and what it was like to fight on an infernal island thousands of miles from home, witnessing savagery and experiencing traumas that you could never fully recover from, you simply must read this one.James Jones masterfully goes from one character to another, introducing the reader to the character's internal thoughts, while keeping the novel moving, marching through the jungle, to a conclusion that is exactly how it was for the soldier - this battle over, on to the next, what for, who cares - you didn't die, but you probably will on the next island. How does one manage these thoughts, as a sane, rational human being? Jones' does an amazing job of bringing out these subleties in each character, how each one deals with it, how each one thinks about it. You can almost feel yourself there on the island, having made it through a day of horrors, lost some acquaintances, exhausted, and what for? In WW 2, it wasn't one year and out of service - you were in it 'til A.) you died, B.) you were maimed, or C.) the war ended. After 24 hours of constant combat and no water during a battle, all you had to look forward to during your "recovery" (a day, two days, a week?) was the same thing all over again, until you either died or somehow, the war ended. While Mallick's films fails spectacularly in attempting to illustrate these points, Jones succeeds in ways that will only cause you to keep reading, imagining what it must have been like, yet thanking your God that you weren't there, and that these brave men were there for us. I cannot imagine why the earlier reviewer here at Amazon trashed this book. Please make your judgements based on the 30-some glowing reviews and his/her one negative review. My only criticism with this book is that Jones seems to be fixated on the p*nis (can you write p*nis at Amazon?!), and writes about homosexuality among the troops quite frequently. Well, he was there, so he must know, and while I personally don't enjoy reading about a man longing for another's "sweet, girl-like buttocks," I have to defer to the author and trust his experience on this one. Do yourself a favor, buy this book, and like "All Quiet on the Western Front," add a timeless war classic to your collection that will help add to your "humanistic" understanding of the war, a war which was about tactics and generals and presidents and prime ministers, but more than anything, like all wars, came down to the individual courage and suffering of the individual soldier. Sermon over.
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