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All Quiet on the Western Front

All Quiet on the Western Front

List Price: $54.95
Your Price: $54.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best War Novel of All Time
Review: This novel kept me interested throughout the course of the plot. War novels do not usually attract me, however this fascinated me in a way that no other has done before. Erich Maria Remarque paints a realistic painting of WWI and the struggles that very young men overcame in this time of death. It is a compelling story of a late teenager who thought joining the army would be a great idea, and along with others whom he has known throughout grade school, discovers he was terribly mistaken. It's horrific, uplifting, and even humorous, and has a breath-taking conclusion. I highly suggest you read this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: John McCance
Review: All Quiet on the Western Front should not only be recognizied as the greatest war novels, but also as one of the greatest novels. While reading, I found myself connecting with the book on so many different levels. First, Remarque's writing is amazing. I found myself stopping during the novel just to realize how great of a book I was reading. Additionally, in the age we live in now, I found that this book changed my entire perspective on war. In the novel Kantorek really illustrates how society glorifies war, something that they have never experienced before. Additionally, I realized how the war torn Paul and his friends' lives apart; they were at the age of twenty, an age where the decisions you make will dictate the life you will live. By going to war, Paul lost the person who he was, and realized that the only stablity in his life was the war. This message is so powerful, and I can't begin to emphasize how moving it really was. I've read some pretty good books in my life, but none have impacted me the way this book did. It showed me how horrible war really is, and how it is near impossible to rationalize taking part in such an event. I hope I can convince the people that have not read All Quiet on the Western Front to read it. Even though I'm not a fan of war novels, I the images Remarque painted still linger in my mind. It is truly one of the most powerful and greatest novels that you can read.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Timeless Theme
Review: I am a high school teacher. I (every couple of years or so) assign this book to be read by my high school history classes. They for the most part like it.

Here are a few things to keep in mind while reading the book:

1. It starts out a little slow. The last several chapters (Chapter 11 especially) are beautifully written with excellent word choices and allusions. I often have students read Chapter 11 aloud in class. It reinforces the concept of the "Lost Generation."

2. The writer, Remarque, was a newspaper reporter. If you are expecting flowery language, you won't find it here. It is very "matter of fact."

3. The themes are timeless. There is a strong anti-education theme in it as well, although a bit subtle. A good debate to have is whether or not this is an anti-war book or more of an anti-authority book.

While this genre of book may not be a personal favorite, I feel that it is one that a well-read, culturally literate person should read at some point in his education.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This will stay with you a long time...
Review: I had to read this book for class and at first I was reluctant. Once I got into it I found it to be an amazing story or war. Don't buy the cliff notes, read the book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Haunting and Engaging
Review: I read this book because of the fascination I first encountered when reading about Hemingway and the post-WW1 "Lost Generation." From history classes and other literature I knew that World War 1 was a horrible bloody war, the likes of which were previously unknown. I knew this was the case both on the front and for those suffering behind the lines too. But I was not prepared for such gritty, disturbing tales of the front as they are told first-hand by the narrator of this novel.

I am not going to summarize the plot in this review. Instead I will concentrate on why this book continues to be important, regardless that nearly a century has past since it was written. War nowadays is just as atrocious and horrible as it ever was. It some ways it has gotten better, and in others worse. Sure today's weaponry is more surgical and precise, but the bombs are also way bigger. We who sit behind the lines really have no idea what is is like to be that person who experiences battle first hand, to breath bullets and piss explosions. If anything, all we civilians know is a body count, which is basically to say how our own side is doing. Sadly, barely anybody cares about the other guys.

This book is written from the German perspective, but it is not about a struggle to belonging to any one group or nation. It is a universal tale of inhuman man-to-man carnage, and what that does to the soul of those involved in such a hopeless mess. It is sickening. At times I literally felt queasy from the atrocities described in gruesome detail. Soldiers on all sides could not help but be destroyed physically, mentally, and spiritually by this war of wars, this war to end all wars, although it could be any war. Perhaps most disheartening is that the soldiers didn't even know what they are fighting for; they only understand the basic tenet that they must kill or be killed. As a result these men who fought are estranged from life, deflated and ruined. There are no heroes in this sad story; everyone looses.

With America currently involved in a war based on specious-at-best intelligence and half of the American population actually supporting such an endeavor, this book is at least as applicable now as it has ever been. Every war supporter, especially those who have never fought in a war themselves, should read this to understand what they are supporting on the micro-level. If after reading it anybody can continue to support war - except as an absolute last resort - then I will be very surprised.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Trenches and circles of hell.
Review: I recently found my [very] old high school copy of this book, and I remembered writing a very appreciative report about it for my eleventh grade English class. Not having anything else convenient to read along my subway ride to work, I started reading it again, after 31 years. And now I remember why my eleventh grade report was so glowing.

Erich Maria Remarque's ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT grabs you by the throat and stomach and doesn't let go, as you are drawn into the blood- and mud-soaked trenches of World War One. Young Paul Baumer, the protagonist, is at first proud and fearless, as he prepares to make a man of himself in the German army. This bravado doesn't last too long. Each battle grows more and more fierce, until this book becomes an unrelenting apocalypse of graves yielding up their dead in mortar attacks. As Paul moves through the trenches, they are nothing less than Dante's circles of the Inferno. It doesn't take Paul too long to discover that wars are fought not for ideals but for old men hungry for power, and will let the young men of their nations die for that hunger.

ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT has earned its reputation not just as a great war novel but as a great critique of humanity's follies and cruelties. This is a powerful book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A review long overdue.
Review: Remarque's masterpiece is beautiful and timeless, perhaps the first modern war novel. Long gone are the days of the heroic charge with bayonettes of pre-industrial age warfare when a former college professor in a glorious moment of bravery could turn back the enemy with a firm resolve and unflinching courage. Remarque sharply snaps the reader into the reality of the 20th century battlefield and reviles it as an ignoble stage of endless and faceless mayhem. He depicts World War I's legacy of prolonged battle which kept soldiers in the filthy trenches for months, eating rats and picking lice out of their hair, not daring to venture out of their holes for fear of being torn apart by mounted machine gun fire and explosives showers... these and more in all of their grisly, bloody, physically and mentally tortuous reality. The experience changes Paul, the protagonist, and he is unable to reconnect with his family and community back home. Absent is the celebrated feeling of being a prestigious war hero one would expect for a local boy turned veteran. The trench becomes all that is real to Paul, his comrades the only source of understanding for his battle-hardened world view. War, Remarque seems to imply, destroys the winners as well.

I was reminded often of this book when watching Samuel Fuller's "The Big Red One" more recently. That film's final line seemed most fitting to Remarque's moral: the only virtue in war is surviving.

The book's writing style is simple and unadorned. The narrative flows so smoothly because moments of most dire peril and those of carefree levity are given equally detailed treatment in disturbingly dispassionate tone. It is at first offensive to conventional morality concerning the urgency and emotional impact of life and death, but it quickly becomes a powerful medium of conveying to us Paul's personal sense of priority and meaning without requiring him to openly comment upon it.

A beautiful tale.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Must Read
Review: The book takes place during World War I in Germany. The army is defending against the French. Paul Baumer and his high school classmates enlist under the direction of their teacher. Little did they know the hardships they would soon face. Gas warfare, trench warfare, and dodging bullets aren't Paul's only troubles, their is always the threat of starving to death and going crazy on count of little sleep. Paul still fights for survival. It's kill or be killed and Paul doesn't want to be the latter. Will Paul come out alive?
I would recommend this book to anyone, especially people that are interested in war or different types of warfare.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Jumping Off Place for the "Horrors Of War" Theme
Review: The horrors of war! How many times have we been exposed to it over the past century? Beginning with War and Peace I'd guess the countless books, movies, TV dramatic presentations, mini-series, and all other conceivable forms of mass-communication have been used for the "Horrors of War" drumbeat.Over and over. Over and over. Over and over.<>One only need read this one classic. All Quiet On the Western Front exposes it all--makes unnecessary countless retellings. In this shattering book we have Mr. Common Man, but a boy, his hopes, dreams, ambitions channeled by a stern School Master into the noble cause of "Fighting for the Fatherland." With broad strokes Ramarque paints the horrors of the abyss he is thrown into, and with precision, fine-line sketches he delineates the shattering of his dreams with his return home, on leave, and priceless revisitation of his classroom. The flashbacks of boyhood memories, alone, are priceless, the depictions unforgettable.<>Truly a classic for all time. A copy of All Quiet On The Western Front should be on every bookshelf in America.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Perspective other than the US
Review: This book is incredible. It is so refreshing to read from the "loser's" point of view instead of the US's all the time. I get so tired of only hearing our side. But it was nice to have my firm belief that other nationalities are people with valid beliefs and opinions be backed up.

I could write literally pages on the brilliance of this book, but I will refrain.

It is a nice, simple read, though a very intense and meaningful one. To clarify, it goes fast, the words are 'easy' but there's so much BEHIND the words.

As Sigmund Freud states, "(War) strips us of the later accretions of civilization and lays bare the primal man in each of us. It compels us once more to be heroes who cannot believe in their own death; it stamps strangers as enemies, whose death is to be brought about or desired; it tells us to disregard the death of those we love." Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front shows the disillusionment of war-how one can easily lose all past ideals and human emotions, how one can easily forget that his enemy is human, and how one can easily fail to remember that he is still alive.

When the reader compares each character in youth to the `person' they have become, the boys of 1916 are now no more than shadows of what they were or could have been. The only time they experience any happiness is when they are with each other, enjoying the peace of camaraderie. Erich Maria Remarque fiercely details to the reader all that is lost in a war-not only lives and money; but for those who are `lucky' enough to survive-their lives have been forfeit as well. "We were eighteen and had begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces...The first bomb...burst in our hearts. We are cut off from...striving...progress. We believe in such things no longer, we believe in the war."


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