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All Quiet on the Western Front
Group Reads - Classic (Fiction)
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All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque (Classics Group Read October/November '14)
I'll start it in 10/15 days. It will be a reread for me; liked it a lot, even if it is not my "usual read"!


When I reread it I felt it was the best fiction book existing on the war. Of all the fiction books I had read nothing compared as favorably. (There are very good non-fiction books too, of course.) Then I wanted to go back and give less stars to other books..... It got me to reading other books by the author, although none are as good as this.
I've requested this from the library but I think it might be a while in arriving so may be November by the time I get round to it!
Evelyn wrote: "I am two thirds of the way through, this has been a much quicker read than I anticipated, can't put it down!"
It's a great read Evelyn! I remember feeling that way the last time I read it - looking forward to my re-read!
It's a great read Evelyn! I remember feeling that way the last time I read it - looking forward to my re-read!

What has stayed with me in the few days since I finished reading is the young voice of the narrator. I don't know what I feel the appropriate age is to participate in war (never?), but 19 and 20 is way too young!
Some passages that touched me to my core were:
"The front is a cage in which we must await fearfully whatever may happen." - showing reluctant acceptance of an unbearable situation, the maturity to accept, the innocence lost
"We are forlorn like children, and experienced like old men, we are crude and sorrowful and superficial - I believe we are lost." - heartbreaking honesty
"It shall bring back again the lost eagerness of my youth." - at 20, to feel that youth is history, the past, but still hopeful that one day youth will return
"They are more to me than life, these voices, they are more than motherliness and more than fear; they are the strongest, most comforting thing there is anywhere: they are the voices of my comrades." - survival
"Through the years our business has been killing; - it was our first calling in life. Our knowledge of life is limited to death. What will happen afterwards? And what shall come out of this?" - good question, are we products of our environment?
And lastly "He fell in October, 1918, on a day that was so quiet and still.......All quiet on the Western Front."
Just started, only few pages. The words of digestion that become so important in the life of the soldiers; the fact that they feel themsef lucky to have so many things to eat, not remembering that the reason was that a lot of them were dead ...

Finished. I've got few lines that impressed me and that I wrote down. O course they're in italian; we'll see when we discuss it fully.
Looking though at what I've noted down I've realized that what impressedme in this book is not the plot or the story, but the consideration of the author about life, war, joung people vs old and things like that ...
Looking though at what I've noted down I've realized that what impressedme in this book is not the plot or the story, but the consideration of the author about life, war, joung people vs old and things like that ...
A copy has come into the library for me but I'm away until Monday so might have to re-request





Jenny wrote: "I've listened to it while away. It is my fourth time of reading it, and though it doesn't hit me with the same force it did when I read it first, it always moves me. What a youth to have. Whenever ..."
That's exactly what I though rereading it this time: still to have faith in the future after having seen all that ...
That's exactly what I though rereading it this time: still to have faith in the future after having seen all that ...


Truer words were never spoken
LauraT wrote: "They say History is the greatest teacher; if only we were listening..."
So true Laura!
I haven't started my re-read of this one yet, but I'm looking forward to it. Last time I found it extremely moving.
So true Laura!
I haven't started my re-read of this one yet, but I'm looking forward to it. Last time I found it extremely moving.

I agree with you, but I do think that WW1 was a particularly horrific war to go through. I loved the bits when the soldiers were trying to figure out who benefited from the war!
I finished this yesterday and found it more poignant than I expected. The sections in which he describes how the way the soldiers get through it is to suppress their own humanity I thought especially moving.
I had seen the film of this (which is also excellent if any of you are interested), but never read it before as I was worried that the descriptions of the front would be too hard for me to take. While I don't think that Remarque skimped on any of that, I was pleasantly surprised to find this not too hard to take after all.
I read my dad's 1930 edition which was translated by A.W. Green. For those of you who read it in English, who did your translation?
Leslie wrote: I agree with you, but I do think that WW1 was a particularly horrific war to go through. I loved the bits when the soldiers were trying to figure out who benefited from the war!"
My husband, who loves History, told me once that People, rulers, when entering in WWI thoght that it would have been a war like the others in the past. But it chaged completely: for the first times almost no "great Battles" like Napoleon, months for a couple of square meters. And for the first time civilians so much involved ...
My husband, who loves History, told me once that People, rulers, when entering in WWI thoght that it would have been a war like the others in the past. But it chaged completely: for the first times almost no "great Battles" like Napoleon, months for a couple of square meters. And for the first time civilians so much involved ...
Leslie, the one I read last time was translated by the same guy (I think you meant A W Wheen) :)
I plan on re-reading in November - maybe I'll try a different translation if I can find it, but I remember thinking the Wheen one was fantastic.
I plan on re-reading in November - maybe I'll try a different translation if I can find it, but I remember thinking the Wheen one was fantastic.

I plan on re-reading in November - maybe I'll try a different translation if I can find it, but I r..."
My translation really was done by Green not Wheen... at least, that is the name printed on the title page of the book!
LOL Leslie! So either one of our editions has a misprint or there are two translators who have very similar names. How discourteous of them! I demand one of them change their names immediately to avoid confusing me! I'm going to write my senator! :)
No but seriously, I remember the Wheen translation being very good, but I think this time I'll look for the Green one if I can find it (to try a new one).
No but seriously, I remember the Wheen translation being very good, but I think this time I'll look for the Green one if I can find it (to try a new one).
I'm mid-chapter four, page 64/295:
The story is just as crushingly effective as I remembered. I had to brace myself for the part mid chapter 4 (view spoiler)
I'd forgotten some of Remarque's techniques though - for example, I liked the odd (view spoiler)
The narrator is very angry but he has every right to be. The callousness, pettiness, and sheer bureaucracy of the war machine are chilling - (view spoiler)
The narrator's disgust with the many "Kantoreks" exhorting sacrifice while at no danger themselves reminded me of a Wilfred Owen poem, "Parable of the Old Man and the Young", which compares the war's leaders to Abraham and the sacrificed soldiers to Issac: http://emilyspoetryblog.com/2013/03/2...
The story is just as crushingly effective as I remembered. I had to brace myself for the part mid chapter 4 (view spoiler)
I'd forgotten some of Remarque's techniques though - for example, I liked the odd (view spoiler)
The narrator is very angry but he has every right to be. The callousness, pettiness, and sheer bureaucracy of the war machine are chilling - (view spoiler)
The narrator's disgust with the many "Kantoreks" exhorting sacrifice while at no danger themselves reminded me of a Wilfred Owen poem, "Parable of the Old Man and the Young", which compares the war's leaders to Abraham and the sacrificed soldiers to Issac: http://emilyspoetryblog.com/2013/03/2...

This is going fast - I'm in Chapter 7, page 155/295.
Jenny, the boot scene got to me too.
Also the horror of (view spoiler) were particularly gut wrenching & real. I really like how the narrator for long stretches refers to the soldiers in mass as "we" in both of those extended scenes; Remarque manages to create a feeling of immediacy that's incredibly affecting.
One other thing I really loved - those moments where the narrator tries to recapture a lost boyhood tenderness:
(view spoiler)
I think it's these intimate moments that make the horror of war even sharper by contrast - going in the same chapter between this and (view spoiler)
This book is as powerful as I remembered - I'm predicting 5 stars.
Jenny, the boot scene got to me too.
Also the horror of (view spoiler) were particularly gut wrenching & real. I really like how the narrator for long stretches refers to the soldiers in mass as "we" in both of those extended scenes; Remarque manages to create a feeling of immediacy that's incredibly affecting.
One other thing I really loved - those moments where the narrator tries to recapture a lost boyhood tenderness:
(view spoiler)
I think it's these intimate moments that make the horror of war even sharper by contrast - going in the same chapter between this and (view spoiler)
This book is as powerful as I remembered - I'm predicting 5 stars.

Remarque manages to have something tender and poetic coexist with the brutality of war without the poetry ever feeling stuck on top. Which reminds me: has anyone seen Terrence Malick's "The Thin Red Line"? It is based on The Thin Red Line by James Jones and it sparked a bit of controversy because it is an incredibly brutal portrait of war but at the same time a celebration of the beauty of nature and life in a strange and very poetic way (some of the inner monologue of the soldiers sounds like poetry).
I agree totally Jenny!
And yes, I saw the movie years ago and thought it was excellect, but I haven't read the James Jones book.
And yes, I saw the movie years ago and thought it was excellect, but I haven't read the James Jones book.
For some reason I thought this was running November/December but I will make time for it this month, I am determined.

This scene was tragic! And that is the sort of thing that makes me believe the WW1 was a particularly horrible war...
Greg wrote: "This is going fast - I'm in Chapter 7, page 155/295. ...
One other thing I really loved - those moments where the narrator tries to recapture a lost boyhood tenderness..."
I think those scenes are a big part of why I found this book so poignant.
@Jenny -- I haven't seen that film although it has been recommended to me before. I think I must have mentally confused it with The Thin Blue Line. I find that type of film generally pretty upsetting so tend to avoid them.
@Alannah -- I thought that this was a pretty fast read, despite the subject matter, so if you have a copy you should be able to finish it before Dec. However, we would be happy to hear your thoughts even if they do come in December rather than November!!

David, it sounds like you probably have a deep understanding of this book from your life experience - thanks for sharing!

I heard an interview with a guy who was a Marine in Falugia in Iraq. The interviewer asked the veteran how they prepared for the loss of their fellow Marines. "They were dug in, they had IED's that could take out an entire platoon. We were supposed to go house to house. We just figured we were gonna die." He said it was a shock when he got home and realized that he had not died.
One scene that's still haunting me was the one where the narrator was trapped with the other enemy soldier in the same shell hole.


My wife said that the first year I was home I ate everything in sight: putting the food away with appalling speed and precision.
The description of the cooking of the stolen goose was outstanding as was the discussion of the tins of bully beef that they liberated from the enemy trenches.

I loved what Remarque done with the book, it's fantastically written and moving, as well as really making you contemplate the pointlessness of war. I agree with Chrissie, in that I've read quite a few WW1 books and this is the best so far. I actually had to double check it was a fictional account half way through, as I thought perhaps I was mistaken about this. It's so, so good.
It went fast for me too Pink - couldn't stop reading either. Whether fiction or non-fiction, it's clear the author knows what he's writing about. He did in fact fight in WWI, and it shows.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Thin Red Line (other topics)All Quiet on the Western Front (other topics)
First published in 1929 All Quiet on the Western Front deals with the experiences of a generation of young German soldiers during WWI.
Some background information and notes can be found in Sparknote's Literature Study Guide.