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Hans Herbert Grimm (1896–1950)

Auteur de Schlump

1 oeuvres 185 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Comprend les noms: הנס הרברט גרים

Œuvres de Hans Herbert Grimm

Schlump (1928) 185 exemplaires

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Nom légal
Grimm, Hans Herbert
Autres noms
Schulz, Emil
Schlump
Date de naissance
1896
Date de décès
1950
Nationalité
Duitsland
Lieu de naissance
Markneukirchen, Duitsland
Lieu du décès
Altenburg, Thüringen, Duitsland
Lieux de résidence
Altenburg, Thüringen, Duitsland
Professions
auteur
leraar

Membres

Critiques

A humorous and tragic view of war, the First World War specifically, from the eyes of a soldier who fights in it. Rather naively, Schlump the principal character of the novel, joins the army in the expectation that he will meet pretty girls. He is favored at the beginning, when despite his youth he is appointed in charge of a French town. Everything is going swimmingly with Schlump meeting girls and generally having fun. He does not see war at this time.
But after a months of this joyful activity, he is transferred to the front lines to fight. This is where his naivete ends and he starts to see the true horrors of war. From this point on, the author gives a vivid, totally unpleasant description of the tribulations and sufferings of Schlump andhisfellow soldiers. War is depicted the way it is, horrible and perhaps unimaginable for civilians.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
xieouyang | 2 autres critiques | Dec 1, 2016 |
Schlump – A Book that will always Burn

Schlump when published back in 1928 had to compete with another book which would steal away the limelight that should have been shone on to this book. All Quiet on the Western Front which was published at the same time went from strength to strength and Schlump was slowly forgotten. Well not completely forgotten the Nazis had not forgotten this anti-war book and promptly burnt it in 1933.

When Hans Herbert Grimm wrote Schlump it was published anonymously and this was his first and last ever novel. What he did leave us after his death in 1950 is a book that is ultimately a thoroughly unconventional novel on the First World War that mixes the best of fiction writing with part documentary of those times in Germany and at the front. What Grimm leaves us is a book that is completely non-nationalistic, astute, and accurate about the leadership and quite Francophile, everything the Nazis would dislike about the book.

What I enjoy about this book is that Grimm is encouraging the reader to underestimate the novel and that is partly down to the way he has written the book. Schlump stands out against other war novels both pro and anti that were written at the same time in that at times it comes across of somewhat of a fairy tale with heavy emphasis on the truth about the war.

For those that think there would be too much blood and gore all over the book will be disappointed in that the war does explode before our very eyes, but the descriptions and the depictions of the war and its horrors does not run over too many pages. The war is happening around Schlump and it is mentioned but the characters of the German Army come to a fore.

It is easy to see why the Nazi censors would take against this book in that for a start it did not suit their narrative of being stabbed in the back by a Jewish leadership. Through Schlump, Grimm describes the German soldiers of the war as less than heroic, the military strategy as senseless, foolish and completely misguided, and the Kaiser of a coward who runs away in defeat. Grimm uses Schlump to describe the war as very cruel very poor joke in which all suffered no glory in this war for all.

His descriptions of the officers not being leaders of men who kept themselves better fed and well away from the front lines and ask did you ever see an officer eat out of a mess tin? A question which men of that era were asking on both sides. The one occurring theme throughout the novel is ‘Only the fools end up in the trenches, or those who’ve been in trouble.’ Schlump then goes on to describe life behind the lines and one can clearly see the difference.

This Schlump is a wonderful novel that deserves its day in the sun and ought to be more widely read as it also adds to the First World War canon of literature and looks at the war from a different perspective. A wonderful erudite book, short, sweet and delivers its own knockout punch against war.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
atticusfinch1048 | 2 autres critiques | Jun 9, 2015 |
This edition has the author listed as ‘Himself’
 
Signalé
bowlees | 2 autres critiques | Jun 3, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
185
Popularité
#117,260
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
3
ISBN
13
Langues
6

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