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Birdsong RC 329 Audio

Birdsong RC 329 Audio

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is as good as anything I've read in English
Review: Faulks tells a whale of a tale in language that brings me near tears with its melody and its beauty. Rarely do even our best writers speak with such clarity, such grace and dignity. Read the story, but listen for the song

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fair love story. Good WW1 story
Review: A pretty good book overall. Tended to drag somewhat, but captured the trench warfare story very well. I wish the author had developed the civilian storyline more completely, but other than that a good book. I would definitly recommend it to someone else and I am glad I read it

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book is among the best I've read in the last five yars
Review: Reminiscent of Flaubert, the author brings us beautifully to a time and era long gone. It's the kind of book that must be read slowly to appreciate the language, and when a chapter is finished you want to go back and read it all over again! Starting with a tragic love affair and going on to the horrors of WWI, this book is both erotic and revealing... of human emotions and passions which endure forever

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Stunning writing in service to a flawed plot
Review: Faulks transports the reader into the trenches of World War I France in a way that stuns and overwhelms. I first read this book while serving as the UN fire chief in Sarajevo, Bosnia during the war, with thousands of mortar rounds a day dropping randomly into the city around us, and snipers, rockets, and mines a part of daily life. Undoubtedly this heightened the impact of the novel, but at the same time the parallel experiences also validated the authenticity of the book's portrayal of the paradoxical terror and offhandedness of everpresent death, and the weariness, and sense of futility, and struggling on with duty regardless. The opening section, setting up the cross-cultural romantic encounter which supposedly scars the protagonist for life, is not as good, and the unfortunate (and mercifully short) ending is jarring and should be skipped.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A loveless, soul-less man loses himself in the horror of WWI
Review: A hundred feet down the light is nonexistent, all sounds are muffled and the slightest mistake on your part can bring instant death from ways you fight not to think about. This is life under the trenches in World War I as Welsh miners try to combat the Germans by digging underground to their trenches and exploding bombs at the same time as Germans dig counter mines and attempt the same. Our hero cannot but help lose his soul in this hell brought back from the past by Sebastian Faulks. Never before have I read a book based on an historical event that brought home the flames, stench, mustard gas, rotting corpses, and sheer terror like this book did for me. Our man stumbles through this inferno having joined the British forces from the start. It is his emptiness from the love that he thought he had with the beutiful wife of the patronizing owner of a French textiles mill which haunts him. When his English firm sent him to France to learn the business he was quickly caught up in the frenzy of a life freed from Victorian constraints before the war. After he and the mill owner's wife flee with only their love, reality sets in and the old moral code reasserts itself with disastorous results for the couple. Driven by this event our man staggers forward and empties himself into the inferno of death in the trenches. Becoming an officer in command of the miners it is his job to protect them and see that their job is done well. It is through these long years of the war that he wrestles with himself and his hollow living corpse. The prose of Mr. Faulks hits home time after time until you are there sniffing the mustard gas and peering over the edge of the trench waiting with dread for the sound of the whistle ordering you over the top. For me the dipassionate attitude of the main character was the only thing that kept from cringing during some of the more particularly graphic description of the fighting in the tunnels. This book got to me in that way and in many other ways like I have not been before by writing. Is this a book for the classics list? I think not but for a very good story and in many points in the book some of the most effective writing I've read I would and do reccomend this fine novel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A flawed, but compelling picture of trench warfare
Review: This book, though, in my view, imperfect in its construction, is nonetheless, a very compelling and frightening portrait of life on the Western Front during the War to end all Wars

The book starts in the Somme region of France in 1910, so you can already guess what battles will be prominently featured in the story. We follow a callow youth as he seduces his host and landlord's wife. As their love consumes them, they decide to run off together, she chucking her boring, bourgeois life, and he, his as yet unmade career as a manufacturer.
She finds herself consumed with guilt at her actions, and leaves her lover in bitterly perfect form to become a killer for the BEF.

The story in its first of many leaps of time jumps to 1914. Our "hero", though that is a difficult term to use shares three and a half years of just unspeakable horror with the reader, enough to satisfy any action/adventure fan.
His growing loss of belief, as well as all the deaths of all the soldiers he know and loves, is shocking and beautifully told, and if we could follow just his story the book would be stronger.
Unfortunately, the author, clearly felt the truth would leave his readers too depressed, and chose to weave in an artless tale of hope told by our soldier's grand-daughter. The cloying last chapter is not only out of place but distracting from the main truth of the book. Mercifully, the scenes set in 1978 are few and forgettable.


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