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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stirring Memoirs..., October 28, 2008
As modern day North americans, we cannot appreciate the experiences soldiers had. Even with our technically superior computer generated, the memories and emotions that real soldiers lived through cannot be equalled.
Alan Cope and Emmanuel Guibert met by happenstance, and the collaboration that resulted is marvelous. Alan Cope tells us through Emmanuels' art his life as a soldier. Drafted at age 18, he joined the army to fight a guy named Adolph. His travels through France, Switzerland, Germany, California, and all points Europe are fascinating. This book is his journal, rendered in charming art that brings to life significant events and people that changed him from naive youth to wisened veteran.
It is clear that war changes people. While there are no atheists in foxholes, after the experience can turn believers into atheists or scar them forever. Alan was changed. His friends Gerhart and Vera were changed. Jako was changed. Landis changed. In the end, each went on with their lives based on their previous experiences.
As a reader, I was entranced by the simple narrative tone of the book. It was almost like Private Alan Cope was right beside me as I lived his life from training to his final years. While we could not smell the smells of the Alps as he hiked on Sundays, or the fresh dew of the French countryside,or the smell of German cooking, we can feel the effect on Alan. We cannot feel the horror of war, or the physcial exhaustion his training, the pain at losing friends, but we can feel the effect on Alan.
One thing about this book that I loved was the sheer variety of 'famous' people that Alan (or his close friends) knew. I also loved the depth of his relationships with his fellow soldiers, and his determined effort to not let his friendships die. One thing is very clear, Emmanuel's friendship is echoed in this book.
Reading this volume, I almost feel myself reaching over and pouring Alan a snifter of brandy and listening spellbound as the evening sun falls.
Thank you Emannauel and Alan for sharing this deep friendship with us.
Www.firstsecondbooks.com
Tim Lasiuta
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Guibert's illustrations shine through with startling clarity in black and white. Cope's stories deserve no less., November 17, 2008
Memory is a tricky thing. Decades later, looking back at a time when you were young, in a foreign land and under fire, you can be forgiven if you mistake a few things. In the case of Alan Cope, former U.S. soldier in World War II, there are only a few stumbling blocks in his recollections, but illustrator Emmanuel Guibert has wisely left them intact in ALAN'S WAR. They are few and far between, it seems, and they only serve to render Alan's story all the more human.
To provide just a short background: Guibert met Cope in the mid-'90s by chance, when Guibert asked him for directions. A native of France, Guibert was intrigued by Cope, an American expatriate now living in France. Cope was born in a coastal town in California and drafted into the war immediately after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. He did his job, like millions of other men in the greatest generation, and saw the world. He did so without fanfare, and some 50 years later, he still didn't expect any. Cope passed away in 1999, but over their five-year friendship, Cope shared many of his war stories with Guibert, a talented artist who would draw those stories under Cope's guidance. The stories were printed in France, where they were warmly received. Now they've been released here in the United States.
Cope, despite being incredibly open in the sharing of his war stories, was nonetheless a very private man, and Guibert respects that. He recorded their conversations and uses Cope's own words to narrate ALAN'S WAR. It makes it even more personal and renders this long-ago era even more immediate to see Cope's words on the page. There's an innocence at the beginning of the book that speaks to the nature of the world at the time, yet there's also a universality to what Cope experiences that translates through the decades.
When Cope and his fellow draftees miss their train to boot camp, they know they're in trouble. So they decide to enjoy their remaining time by seeing the sights of New York City. In another book, it would almost be a throwaway tale, not worthy of remembering or spotlighting. Here, it becomes a tender look at the playfulness of boys headed off to war, not knowing which, if any, of them would survive the experience.
Cope was an interesting man, and the years that passed since the war did not dull his insight. He kept a soft-spoken viewpoint that allowed him to modestly and subtly detail the friendships he developed and the brutal experiences he endured without ever dwelling in sentimentality. That was his rare gift as a storyteller, and Guibert's knowing move to leave it intact. Better still, Guibert's illustrations shine through with startling clarity in black and white. Cope's stories deserve no less.
--- Reviewed by John Hogan
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Story of One Man's Love for Life, February 26, 2009
On the surface, Alan's War is the story of Alan Cope's life after being drafted by Uncle Sam as a teenager and seeing a lot of war-torn Germany and Eastern Europe. Apart from a couple of close encounters with enemy fire, and almost getting run over by an allied tank, Cope was never necessarily in harm's way. With the end of World War II, Cope tried a variety of jobs, eventually moving back to his hometown of Pasadena and going to college under the GI Bill; he found a different America that he couldn't relate to, spending the rest of his life in Germany and finally in France, where he died in 1999. This is on the surface. Beneath the delicate art strokes and careful detail, the crafted words from endless interviews between Alan Cope and author/illustrator Emmanuel Guibert, is a story of one man's love for life, a constant respect for the immense beauty of the world, and for the importance of friendship and companionship throughout one's existence. After it's success in France, Alan's War is now available in English for the first
time to an American audience.
Reviewed by Alex C. Telander
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