|
Kilima.com - an international online store featuring Art, Film, History, Literature,
Music and Travel... |
|
|
|
|
Peace | 
enlarge | Author: Richard Bausch Publisher: Knopf Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy Used: $6.99 You Save: $12.96 (65%)
New (37) Used (15) from $6.99
Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 82261
Media: Hardcover Pages: 192 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.4 x 0.9
ISBN: 0307268330 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780307268334 ASIN: 0307268330
Publication Date: April 15, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: very good condition!! looks like new, just no dust jacket
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
From the prize-winning novelist and world-renowned short story writer, recipient of the PEN/Malamud Award and the Academy Award from the Academy of Arts and Letters, a powerful novel about war, trust, and salvation that begs to be read in a single sitting.
Italy, near Cassino. The terrible winter of 1944. A dismal icy rain, continuing unabated for days. Guided by a seventy-year-old Italian man in rope-soled shoes, three American soldiers are sent on a reconnaissance mission up the side of a steep hill that they discover, before very long, to be a mountain. And the old man’s indeterminate loyalties only add to the terror and confusion that engulf them on that mountain, where they are confronted with the horror of their own time—and then set upon by a sniper.
Taut and propulsive—with its spare language, its punishing landscape, and the keenly drawn portraits of the three young soldiers at its center—Peace is a feat of economy, compression, and imagination, a brutal and unmistakably contemporary meditation on the corrosiveness of violence, the human cost of war, and the redemptive power of mercy.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
no words are wasted April 29, 2008 Richard Cumming (nida) 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
PEACE, the title of Bausch's new novel will throw many readers. This is a war story where the tension builds inexorably and there are rarely any moments that feel peaceful. Readers have to earn this peace. Most of the story takes place on a cold winter night in 1944 in Italy as the German army retreats with the US Army hot on their tails. Three Americans are sent up a hill to see if they can spot the Germans and report back on their movements. The main character, Corporal Marson has Joyner and Asch serving under him. They have a guide, an elderly Italian man who they found driving a cart in the area, As they climb the hill the weather turns from bad to worse as night falls and they determine that this hill is actually much bigger than they knew. It is a mountain and as they bivouac on the side of it in a blizzard they begin to fear the worst. This pithy novel is written with utter economy. We feel the fear and the pain of our 3 soldiers as they stalk their invisible enemies. I won't give any more away except that when you reach the conclusion you will find peace, but only for a moment. Simply magnificent writing here.
Man's (In)Humanity to Man June 13, 2008 David Donelson 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
Richard Bausch's taut novel tells us what happens when civilian soldiers go to war. It's a powerfully atmospheric story about three American soldiers sent up a mountain in Italy near Cassino during the brutal winter of 1944. Their mission: see what the Germans are doing on the other side. Their mental state: conflicted by the shooting of a German woman they witnessed just before they left. Was it murder? An act of war? Should they report it when they return or simply fold it into their psyches? They struggle with the moral dilemma while they slog their way up the cold, miserable mountain. Bausch's ability to bring the reader fully into his story is well-demonstrated in this book. The tension builds page by page until the wholly satisfying climax, the niggling arguments among the men are just repetitive and just disconcerting enough to make the reader angry, and the perfectly-mounted descriptions of the cold, hard rain, the wet, view-obliterating snow make you wish (just like the soldiers) that you were somewhere else. Ambiguity is a beautiful thing in Bausch's hands. The squad's guide, Angelo, could be a simple peasant or a German spy--or something else entirely. The protagonist, Corporal Marson, could be a baseball-playing All-American hero or a morally-bereft corporal looking for the easy way out. How these and the other sources of tension in the book are resolved propels the reader through to the end. Dave Donelson, author of Heart of Diamonds: A Novel of Scandal, Love and Death in the Congo
Beautifully vivid April 23, 2008 Reader by night (Chicago, IL) 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
Peace is a story of four men--three American soldiers and one aging Italian--as they tread through the outskirts of Italy near the end of World War II. The three men, led by Corporal Marson, were sent to survey a hill they discovered. Along the way, they forcefully enlisted the help of Angelo, a veteran of World War I, who later turned out to be someone trying to survive war at the expense of his principles. After bloodshed and brotherhood, Marson and Angelo, despite their obvious differences, discovered that their lives and conscience are in each other's hands. The novel is beautifully vivid in words and setting. Richard Bausch introduced characters and stories of World War II that we rarely see. He formed his characters so carefully, yet so seemingly easy, you would almost believe he knew them. Highly recommended for summer reading.
Not an Anti-War Novel- Short, but a Gem May 23, 2008 Belatn (USA) 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
Beg to differ with previous reviewer, but this is not an anti-anything work. It's a story of conscience and the dignity of man in inhuman circumstances. Highly recommended.
A Perfect Novel About War June 20, 2008 H. F. Corbin (ATLANTA, GA USA) 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Richard Bausch has written a near perfect novel about war, in this case World War II, that period of world history that continues to engage writers and readers alike. Three American soldiers and their guide, an old Italian man, are sent on a reconnaissance mission in Italy in 1944. Most of the story takes place on one awful winter night and unfolds through the eyes of Marson. He is twenty-seven, from Washington D.C, in charge of the other two soldiers, and has a wife back home and a child whom he has never seen, whose "little cracked photo" he carries with him at all times. The other two G.I.'s are Asch, who is Jewish, from Boston and married to a woman 15 years his senior and Joyner, a single nineteen-year-old from Michigan who likes neither African Americans, Jews or Catholics. Angelo, the seventy-year-old enigmatic Italian, completes this foursome. These four men from four different parts of the world are thrown together by combat; and their lives, if they survive, will be forever changed by this night. What Mr. Bausch gives the reader in this short novel of 171 pages is a picture of every war. Some men do cowardly things while others, left to their own devices, show both individual and collective courage under the worst of conditions. Although these men are frightened and are young and far from home and family, they do what they have to do. Certain scenes from this novel reminded me of another fine novel about this era, Tony Earley's THE BLUE STAR and even Mary Tillman's sorrowful nonfiction book BOOTS ON THE GROUND BY DUSK. Mr. Bausch's language is spare and completely appropriate for his bleak subject in this richly nuanced novel where the characters come alive on every page. His discription of Marson's leave-taking from his family, so powerful and beautifully written, touches a chord in all of us who have ever left the comfortable nest of home for whatever reason: "It came to him [Marson] that he had taken this scene, this street, these people, for granted, had simply accepted all of it, and them, as his world. He had a thought: this is the surround. Just the word, surround, in that sentence, seemed freighted with new meaning. It could not be spelled any other way, was not the word surroundings. It was a different word. It was his life itself, containing his home, these parked cars, this house, this sky. . . It caught his breath." PEACE will speak to you on many levels. I have only read previously the novel VIOLENCE by this writer. I suspect that the loss is mine.
|
|
|
|
| |
|