I really liked this work. I had started reading The Trilogy and found it difficult. I decided to start at the beginning of this author's work. This is Mr. Dos Passos' first novel. It is relatively short and written in a more straightforward manner than The Trilogy. I often find earlier works of authors to be more straightforward and I enjoy them more than later, more complicated work. Virginia Woolf and James Joyce are both examples of this for me. Simply a matter of taste...
This novel was published in 1920. It reminds me of "A Farewell to Arms" and "All Quiet on The Westen Front". It predates both of these fine works and is a shorter work than either of them.
Like Ernest Hemingway, Mr. Dos Passos drove an ambulance during World War I. In both this novel and "A Farewell to Arms", the protagonist is an ambulance driver. Mr. Dos Passos and Mr. Hemingway also associated with each other after World War I.
Like "All Quiet on The Western Front", this is an anti war novel. Both of these novels take place on the western front. There are many stories told within these novels that are similar. As an example each novel has a story about one man killing another in close quarter combat and both survivors being affected by, and relating to the person he killed.
There is also a fairly deep philosophical discussion among enlisted men towards the end of novel. That philosophical conversation puts me in mind of Robert E. Lee Pruitt's discussions in the stockade, and to some extent with Sgt. Warden, in the novel "From Here to Eternity". In this work under review, this philosophical discussion includes a condemnation of private property and is clearly socialistic in nature.
I intend to keep reading the works of Mr. Dos Passos in chronological order. I hope I continue to enjoy these early works and eventually am prepared to read The Trilogy.
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