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Testament of Youth: An Autobiographical Study of the Years 1900-1925 (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics)

Testament of Youth: An Autobiographical Study of the Years 1900-1925 (Penguin Twentieth-Century Classics)

List Price: $16.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant
Review: A fascinating, emotional journey against the backdrop of WWI and its terrible carnage - evocative use of poetry, memories of music and descriptions of places (especially Malta). Though I object to the word "colonials" to describe Australians. And I would have liked to know more about her Mother (& her experiences).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: just great
Review: As I have set myself the topic "War in English literature" for my final examination you can imagine that I have to read quite a lot of books dealing with warfare. So far, this is undeniably the best. Brittain's book really is a testament to future generations about the "Great War". The content is far too diverse to summarize in a few sentences; let us just say that Brittain managed to capture the spirit of a whole generation.

I might add that I think that World War One is the perfect showcase of a futile conflict. Those dealing with world war literature would do well not just to read the literature of one side. For the American reader I can recommend Remarque's "All Quiet on the Western Front" or (less known) Kraus' "The last days of mankind."

In fact, many of these authors (and also many of the war poets) voice the sentiment that the real enemy wasn't the soldier in the opposite trench - it was one's own general staff.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fascinating
Review: I began this book unsure of what I would find. Two days later I was glad I took a chance. A powerful book. All the cliches come to mind, of course, and they all work.This book lacks the acid of Graves biography, it's sadder, in many respects it's deeper and has a sense of humanity that one never finds in Graves or Sasson. One should read this book if for no other reason then to look at WW1 with a different perspective.It gives you a sense of what pre-war England was like and what was lost in the trenches, both the physical and spiritual cost. Excellent book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautifully Written by a World War 1 Survivor!
Review: I couldn't put this book down and I don't usually have little interest in WWI. I tend to read more about World War II and the Holocaust of Nazi Germany, but this book grabbed me and did not let me go until the last page! I wish more people knew about this rich and engrossing book. It has so much to say to us moderns about life as it was in the early 19OO's. A spectacular read for anyone interested in history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gift Book
Review: I first became aware of this author when I saw the PBS series of this book. Another reviewer was right, it should be a movie, instead it was a television series. I also had this book, then someone borrowed it and they lost it. I found a new copy at a garage sale and everytime I find a copy, I buy it as I am always giving them away as gifts telling people that they must read this book.My 16 year old daughter loves it also. It is well-written. As someone who taught high school history, I know how important having an interesting book dealing with history is when trying to get most teens to think about the past.. I also recommend reading Testiment of Friendship and Testament of Experience, the continuation of this story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: evocative autobiography of one woman's experiences in WWI
Review: I first read this book when I was not much younger than Vera Brittain was when she "viewed the outbreak of the First World War as an interruption of her plans", and I was immediately touched by her experiences. I have read (and re-read & re-read) this book many times. While I am not of the same social class that she was, I can relate to her desire to make something of her life, first through a university education (then restricted to many women) and later through finding meaningful work. (This is something that we all seek.) She fell happily in love, only to lose first her fiance, then her two male friends, and finally her beloved only brother in the carnage of the First World War. Her experiences as a V.A.D. (Volunary Aide Detachment) nurse in the war--from describing what the wards were like, to the frenzy she faced during a "push", to watching the Americans arrive in 1917, to her life on the hospital ship "Britannic", that's right, the sister ship to "Titanic"--both went down, are unforgettable. When she writes, she does not spare herself, nor seek to make herself look good--and she takes an unflinching look at her own difficulties (a word which does not even begin to describe it!!) adjusting to a post-war world which did not want the survivors. She tells of the difficulties she had fitting in (again, but this time older & wisher) at Oxford, of her mental near-breakdown, and of the bright light that was Winifred Holtby. I cannot recommend this book enough. It should be required reading in colleges and universities, and not just for history, English, and womens' studies majors. Perhaps those who do not understand what all the fuss over "women's lib." is all about should make this required reading as well (both male and female). She is the first feminist role model for me, and inspired me to learn as much as I could about current events AND history (so much so that I majored in history in college, with a concentration in modern Europe). This book is well worth your time and effort, and will probably send you to the nearest library or bookstore to hunt for more books on this era. It is also rare because most of the books written about the First World War are written by men (Sassoon, Graves, etc.), so this is unique in that it tells of the impact of the war from a woman's perspective. History tends to forget that women as well as men have experienced war. Brittain writes both from the view of those back home in Britain (when she is on leave) and from the view of someone at the front, cleaning up the wreckage (as a volunteer nurse). If you are wondering what happens to her, she wrote a "sequel" of sorts titled "Testament of Experience", which chronicles the years 1933-1950. "Testament of Youth" is a wonderful book, one which you will read again and again, and all the more moving because it is a true story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Seduces Your Soul
Review: I read this when I was fifteen, and it changed me. The issue of my time was nuclear weaponry, and I, who really hadn't given much thought to war or peace, became a passionate pacifist, and in particular someone willing to go to the wall for disarmament.

I thought of growing up as something inevitable, that happened passively, with the passage of time; I never thought of taking hold of my maturation, and taking an active part in my development. After I read this book, my whole view of what is humanly possibly changed.

Vera Brittain "soberly equipped in [her] new V.A.D. uniform... turned [her] back forever upon [her] provincial young ladyhood." At first suggestion, you'd think she merely left what was still essentially Victorian England for War, and returned to the modern era of the twenties. The fact is, a generation jaded, but also educated, and in a way, sophisticated by the Great War, ushered in the modern era.

This is the essence of the book, and the reason for its title, but this is not an academic thesis. This is a moving and eloquent personal account of one of the most wrenching events in recent history. There are passages in this book, such as the first time Vera sees American troops, as they march down the road past her camp, the I have read hundreds of times, have memorized with so many readings, and yet still make me cry. The book has become a part of my soul. My own copy, that I have had for nineteen years, I had to take to Kinko's to be spiral bound, I had worn out the binding. The edges are tattered, and some of the pages are stained because I have taken this book many places to continue reading it for the fourth, or seventh, or twelfth time.

People interested in WWI will enjoy reading a V.A.D.'s perspective; as far as I know, this is the only complete first-hand account of this war from a woman. But people who know nothing of the war will still be touched by Vera's recollections of those days, written from two decades later.

Another stunning thing is her treatment of her recollections; her memory is good, full of details that breathe life into her story. She is completely honest about herself, her deeds, and thoughts at the time, even one that might have embarrassed. She is fond of remarking on her naiveté, but does not poke fun at herself, or express regret over the course of her life. Obviously, she believes the war was a great and terrible tragedy, but if there were war, and there was, she went with her generation, and came home, and feels she could have done nothing else.

But she makes one of the most eloquent statements of war I have ever read when she remarks on the return of troops in masses when the war has finally ended. People are not cheering "We won the war!" she says, but merely sighing "The war is over."

This is a beautiful and captivating book, but it isn't a light read; you have a relationship with this book, so be prepared for commitment.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: it never ends
Review: it has been a while since i have read this book, & i have to replace my lost copy, but, i still remember how unsparing it is.
i got it to learn more of what my maternal grandfather went through. several years ago, i learned from listing to john mccdermot's version of eric bogle's "and the band played waltzing matilda" my mum listened to it with me. i have never been able to listen to this song without at weeping or at least tearing up. as i wiped my eyes, my mum casually informed me that her da had miraculously survived gallipolli! knowing that fact let me on trying to find out about the nice little corner of hell known as the great war. (i am not a christian any longer, but, i retain a very real idea that hell is real, not a place you goto when you arn't a christian, but, a place we put each other in) this book is more important than ever, & i would like any person who is thinking war is glorious, or willing to rush in head first, it should be reqired reading. writing this on sept 11th, & as a person of whom some of their earliest memories are of watching the veitnam war on television, & who knows all too well the damage war does: (my paternal uncle jaime died in italy five weeks before ww2 ended) in memeory of the dead of all wars, the sept 11 victims, & the ones whose bodies lived, but their souls died. sometimes, i think the first two catagories are the lucky ones, to quote long john silver via robert louis stevenson. thank you, vera brittain. i hope that you are back with your finance, your brother, & his mates, young again, & i deeply hope that all of you are at peace now. (revised slightly on date indicated, but, written on the first anniversary of 9/11)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Why isn't this GREAT Book better known here in the States?!
Review: Reading the first few pages of this extraordinary memoir convinces me that Vera Brittain was truly one of the great writers ever! In fact, it must be among the very greatest memoirs ever. So when I mention this book to friends, they without exception , have never heard of it! Granted it's about a war from long ago, starting 90 years ago, a horror that Vera B. looks at, and condemns with all her passionate genius. And there were hundreds of classics written at the time, written about this most senseless of wars, a slaughter worse than anyone could ever have predicted. But she describes with great compassion this nightmare, and its effect on herself and her generation. When you read about how her fiance is killed, it will be difficult not to put the book down, and do some serious thinking. And her nursing efforts aboard the SS Brittanica (later sunk by a German U-Boat) make a fine story as well. The book may be a bit dense, and overly literary, but it seems that during this era quoting poetry was a normal part of conversation, unlike today!.Anyway, give this book a chance and you'll be completed entranced by this incredible author!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wonderfully moving personal account life during WW1
Review: This book by Vera Brittain is one of the most moving that I have read. Written as an account of the experiences of young men and women at the onset and during the First World War, it gives a particular insight which is different from, but equally absorbing as, those accounts, so often understated, of soldiers who fought in the trenches during the conflict. To be more accurate, while she recounts the feelings and experiences of the men who were closest to her, hers is the only woman's viewpoint which is given in any depth - and, indeed, it is her personal account, given in such depth that it draws in and involves the reader in a way unlike any simple factual account of events. While it recounts in some detail her own work as a nurse in the war theatres, it is a story with as much muted romanticism as those of the Brontes or Jane Austen, and belies to a degree the orthodoxy of Vera Brittain's feminism. This is a book to be recommended without hesitation, for anyone interested in the period, but also as a timeless account of human endeavour, endurance and love.


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