In Through the Wheat:
A Novel, by Thomas Boyd (1923) William Hicks enrolls in the army for an
adventure on the western front in France.
The novel begins as what one might describe as a typical wartime platoon
story: the platoon is populated with men from various parts of America. The commanding office is a former English
professor from Texas. Hicks becomes good
friends with a braggart of a Mississippi boy named Pugh. They have names and backgrounds and
personalities. At first there is mainly
a lot of inaction, waiting, which upsets the soldiers, who have come to France
to fight the Germans. As the story
progresses from one battle to the next, the names and personalities fall away,
either because solders are killed or wounded or because in the end the
brutality of the battles makes men forget who they are and who their fellow
soldiers are. In the end, at least for
Hicks, they stop caring about whether they are living or dead.
This novel doesn’t have great pretensions. It’s not sentimental. It doesn’t claim to be about more that its
one subject: war, the first world war, and the terrific battles in France. It
focuses tightly on Hicks and his experiences.
Its descriptions of battle are vivid and intense, but the language is
not lush. It’s spare and precise and
provides a specific sense of geographical place even for readers who don’t know
where the place is. Hicks, who seems likable
enough in the beginning, gradually descends to a state of near madness. Even his comrades in battle recognize his
madness. Several scenes describing gas
attacks make clear how terrible such attacks were.
Boyd gives only basic information about the war. We learn about the battles the soldiers
engage in from road signs or overheard comments from fellow soldiers or
officers. He gives us no sense of battle
strategy, of the goals of the war. He simply
tells the story from the level of the men in the trenches—the chaos and
disorder, the uncertainty, the bombardment of the allied soldiers, the machine
gun fire, the unexpected bullets that come out of nowhere, the forfeiture of
individual will to the commands that send them into battle.
The title comes from the wheat fields through which Hicks
and his platoon move towards the German front line. This is one of the best
novels about war and battles I’ve encountered.
No comments:
Post a Comment