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A Soldier of the Great War (Chunky Read) READING SCHEDULE INCLUDED
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Petra
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Feb 09, 2014 06:06PM

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The idea of splitting people into two different kinds of feet made me laugh and then it made sense after thinking about it.

Laura, I am liking the book. It keeps getting better and better.

I agree with Petra, that the insults are to make Niccolo think; to gain awareness of his world. And it is to mark the general stupidity of youth. How time flies by and you find you've wasted it. How you'll always regret not seeing, doing, living. Niccolo's world is tiny. Alessandro wants to enlarge it for him.
And young Alessandro cracked me up! That scene in "Patrizia's" bed!

Laura, I am liking the book. It keeps getting better and better."
Great news, Meg. Thank you. I will try & get back to this one soon.
I loved Alessandro the old. I loved his curmudgeon attitude.
I like Alessandro the young too, though he seems a completely different person. Maybe this story is going to show us the experiences he goes through to shape him into Alessandro the old?
I like Alessandro the young too, though he seems a completely different person. Maybe this story is going to show us the experiences he goes through to shape him into Alessandro the old?

I just made it to part two, and I am more interested than before. I really love the lines at the end of part one about the war:
The real story of a war is no story at all--blackness, sadness, silence.
'If I describe what I saw of the war, you'll know it from the point of view of the living, and that is the smallest part of the truth. The truth itself is what was finally apprehended by those who didn't come back.'
That right there sounds like truth.
Laura, I loved those lines about the war too! Especially the one about the truth being known by the ones who died.

There's a subtle power in his writing. It's good I've had some distance from Hannah Kent's writing, which is more muscular, words you can't turn yourself loose from.
Helprin whispers, and you really have to tune in and focus to grasp the power there. And you have to be in the mood for the softness, the shades and shadows.

Sheila, you are feeling the same way I do that there is a great difference with Alessandro the old and Alessandro the young.
I am wondering if he sees a lot of himself in Niccolo and that is why he is spending so much energy on him. Maybe he has made a lot of mistakes along the way and thinks that he can help Niccolo avoid them?

I think you've made a great observation there. Maybe that's why he feels it's so important to help N. He probably sees himself in him.


I'm very curious about Lia. I wonder if she will be the girl he falls in love with. I'm really hoping for a good love story. And enjoying the historical aspects too.
I hope I'm not the only one behind schedule.

Like Laura, I'm also very curious about Lia. I love how rebellious she seems thus far - carrying a gun on her horse, demanding to do things on her own, refusing to placate her listeners. I couldn't help but smile when Alessandro implied, while speaking to his father, that he probably wouldn't be disciplined when it came to Lia: "Papa, she swims nude in the sea. She carries a pistol. And she wears perfume that makes me dizzy. Sometimes I go to the garden gate and smell the handle, because, when she touches it, the perfume stays." What powerful lines, and it's so perfect that Alessandro's father can relate to this sentiment himself, and that he concedes that as a youth, he wasn't always disciplined with women either. I found that very touching, perhaps even a little foreboding. I'm wondering if Nicolo's lack of discipline is going to have heavy consequences later on in the novel...
That being said, I feel more of a kinship right now with Nicolo than with either Alessandro - I appreciate how clueless he is because it more or less makes Alessandro explain everything. Nicolo tends to ask all of the questions that I myself am wondering, which makes me very appreciative of his character!
I'm loving this read so far, and very excited to have the support of a group to make it all the way through!

I find the more I read of Alessandro the young the more I like him.
I particularly loved the whole train episode.

That is a terrific passage, Katharine. I was thinking the same thing about his lack of discipline and his father's comment re: having a similar issue.





You are actually farther along than I am. I don't even know who Rafi & Lucinda are.



The more I think about it I am wondering why the author chose the first part of the book with Niccoli, anyone have a clue?
I thought the train scene, where he had to "force" the conductor to sell him a ticket in a sleeping car with a woman hilarious. He fantasized about the woman, fantasized about how he would sleep with her and then he did. All with Janet saying, "Why me?" is it the war? It was so understated and yet said so much.

Meg....I have a clue but won't say. :D

What are the flowers that the soldiers are gathering?
Pretty funny scene with the cornel in the hotel.
I was really curious to know what the flowers are that the soldiers are gathering too? Anyone have any ideas?
Meg, at least you know that your question will most likely be answered by the end of the book. LOL
Meg, at least you know that your question will most likely be answered by the end of the book. LOL

Meg, at least you know that your question will most likely be answered by the end of t..."
It does explain the flowers later on in the book.

I am caught up for this week's discussion. Now I just need to read the sections for the discussion that begins next week.

Irene, I totally agree with you about war, but at the same time, fully support our troops (as I'm sure you do also, no matter what country you're from). My nephew is a Marine and the bravery is beyond belief, what those guys are willing to risk for the rest of us.
I'm hoping there won't be any graphic war scenes, as I don't like that kind of thing.

I am caught up for this week's discussion. Now I just need to read the sections for the discussion that begins next week."
They were in such a dilemma. Armies can only function with men that are, if not committed to the cause, honor bound to fight for it. Alessandro put it well when he said that it was harder for Guariglia to stay alive and see his family when someone deserts the line and if everyone deserts then it will be the Austrians looking for them and not the Italians. However, after all the horror and idiocy that these men have seen, I can understand the idea that leaving and seeing my family would overwhelm their thoughts. Thought provoking chapter.



This book is posing a problem for me. I picked up a "first read" book because I did not want to read to far ahead in this one. Well, after the excellent writing in this book, I am irritated with this other one. I am afraid that it may be some time before I will be able to enjoy an average book again.



I am enjoying the author's writing style. I am a little behind so I haven't hit the emotional end of part VI yet, probably tonight.

I have never thought about that aspect. It opens up so many potential ideas. Wonderful question!
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