Knowledge Base Glossary    Contact Us
Search  
   
Browse by Category
Knowledge Base .: Archives Fiction and Non-Fiction Reviews .: History .: Reviewers- Bookpleasures Team .: My Father’s War

My Father’s War

Author: Paul West

 ISBN: 0-929701-75-5

 

The following review was contributed by:  Kathryn Atwood Click Here To View More Of Kathryn's Reviews

            For writer Paul West, the connections between the two world wars of the last century transcend the likes of a train car at Compiegne and a Bavarian private named Adolph Hitler.  West’s connections are personal, powerful memories of a one-eyed father, maimed in the “Great War,” playing war games with his son while Nazi planes regularly bombed a nearby English town.  West’s father, forever transformed by “his war,” was an enigma and mystery to West; My Father’s War is his attempt to work out that mystery.

            As West seeks to assemble the puzzle pieces at his disposal, a beautiful and moving portrait of his father emerges: a teenager issuing from the mud and blood of WWI trenches who became a respected veteran never quite comfortable with peacetime.  His discomfort with post-war life far surpassed his frequent unemployment due to his war-damaged eye.  When other Englishmen were hiding in their homes with their curtains drawn during Nazi air raids, West’s father would go outside to watch the planes, partly because he had come to admire the Germans while gunning them down on European battlefields and partly because, as West relates, he was “going after some sullen undesirable beauty he must first have seen from the trenches.”  Beauty in the trenches? Yes.  It was there that “he had found men at their noblest.”  He never stopped longing for that beauty but it almost completely evaded him during his civilian life.  That is, until the outbreak of the second world war: then, for a few years, he embraced the beauty of his old war with a salute to the new. He began to teach  his pre-adolescent son soldering through war games.

            Is it possible that the senior West played war with his son in order to prepare him for real warfare?  Possibly.  No one knew how long World War II would last.  But perhaps the more likely reason was that “the only busyness he regarded as genuine toil was soldering.  All the rest, which is to say life’s work, he regarded as frippery, trivia.”  He was first and last, a soldier.

            The book is comprised of a series of essays, some previously published, written in novelist West’s inimitable prose which is so lyrical at times, it occasionally threatens to leave earth (and some readers) behind.  In the chapter entitled “An Extraordinary Mildness,” West describes his father’s later years in terms of a certain lightness of existence: “almost all the woes of the human condition [were] floating away from him, although ascending with him toward the nullity that, compared with his post-mortem paradises, was the merest tincture of slightness.”  Excellent prose?  Well, yes.  Slightly incomprehensible?  Definitely.

            If West’s writing sometimes aviates into clouds of rarified incomprehensibility, it also (and usually) soars into prose of pure gold.  Ruminating on Hitler’s reticence to invade England, West opines: “If only Hitler the knowitall had followed through, brushing aside the popguns and Robin Hood pikes along with the remnants of the British army, we would all have been goners; but by then he was lusting eastward toward Mother Russia and “Uncle Joe,” and my father and I had joined the survivors in the street, crisp with our sense of reprieve.”  West exhibits his formidable descriptive skills while watching his father watch American bombers returning from the mainland: “Not a bomber left its place on this return trip as the crews, with the correct bustle and protocol of bombing left behind, tuned in to swing music on the American Forces Network, chewed fresh gum, and over the sea slung out their machine guns and other gubbins to lighten the load.”

            Was West was able, at last, to completely understand his father?  The emotive center of his book focuses not on the mystery solved but the journey through it.  Whether writing in convoluted or golden prose, West has succeeded in piecing together a very moving account of his father, an eternal soldier, discovered by his son between two wars.

Related Articles

article Interview: Lyz Glick, Co-Author-Your Father’s Voice
 Genre: Biographies & MemoirsAuthor: Lyz Glick and Dan Zegart

(No rating)  11-16-2004    Views: 21544   
article Your Father’s Voice: Letters for Emmy About Life with Jeremy—and Without Him After 9/11
Genre: Biographies & MemoirsAuthors: Lyz Glick and Dan ZegartISBN Number: 0-312-31921-5 

(No rating)  11-16-2004    Views: 18672   
article Young Trudeau Son of Quebec, Father of Canada 1919-1944: Volume One.
Authors: Max and Monique NemniTranslated by William JohnsonISBN: 0771067496  The following review was contributed by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Editor of Bookpleasures. CLICK TO VIEW  Norm Goldman's Reviews       To read Norm's Interview with Max and Monique Nemni CLICK HERE

(No rating)  6-19-2006    Views: 6526   
article Interview of Authors of Young Trudeau Son of Quebec Father of Canada 1919-1944
Authors: Max and Monique NemniTranslated by William JohnsonISBN: 0771067496 The following interview was conducted by:  NORM GOLDMAN:  Editor of Bookpleasures. CLICK TO VIEW  Norm Goldman's Reviews    To read Norm's review of the book CLICK HERE

(No rating)  6-22-2006    Views: 5785   
article Interview With Sue William Silverman Author of Because I Remember Terror Father, I Remember You
 Author: Sue William Silverman ISBN: 0820321753The following interview was conducted by: E.Dian Moore &  To read more about Dian Moore’s reviews click HERE To read Dian's Review Of The Book CLICK HEREBP: When you took the first step toward recovery, can you recall your feelings that day?Actually, it wasn’t really one day. For me, it wasn’t that clearly defined. Over about a fifteen-year period, I sought help from something like 11 therapists. I will say, though, that I had a turning point...

(No rating)  9-29-2005    Views: 7633   
article A Father’s Abuse…A Doctor’s Love: The Powerful Story of a Tortured Boy Who Prevailed With the Help of a Very Special Doctor
Click Here To Purchase This Book From Amazon Author: Louis PanesiISBN: 9780979216602Writing a story about your personal experiences with your Psychiatrist and sharing your family secrets with the world takes a great deal of courage. And that is exactly what Louis Panesi did when he published A Father’s Abuse…A Doctor’s Love: The Powerful Story of a Tortured Boy Who Prevailed With the Help of a Very Special Doctor. Panesi was the victim of his father and grandfather’s verbal abuse where subtly...

(No rating)  8-10-2007    Views: 5221   
article Because I Remember Terror Father, I Remember You
 Author: Sue William Silverman ISBN: 0820321753The following review was contributed by: E.Dian Moore &  To read more about Dian Moore’s reviews click HERE To Read Dian's Interview With The Author CLICK HERESue William Silverman was sexually abused by her father from age four to eighteen while her mother denied and allowed the abuse. When Sue's therapist suggested she write down her experience, Sue expected only a paragraph to emerge. Instead, Because I Remember Terror emerged from an...

(No rating)  9-29-2005    Views: 6539   

User Comments

No comments have been posted.


.: Powered by Lore 1.5.2