Three Soldiers

Three Soldiers is a 1921[1] novel by American writer and critic John Dos Passos. It is one of the American war novels of the First World War, and remains a classic of the realist war novel genre.

First edition

Background

H. L. Mencken praised the book in the pages of The Smart Set:

"Until Three Soldiers is forgotten and fancy achieves its inevitable victory over fact, no war story can be written in the United States without challenging comparison with it—and no story that is less meticulously true will stand up to it. At one blast it disposed of oceans of romance and blather. It changed the whole tone of American opinion about the war; it even changed the recollections of actual veterans of the war. They saw, no doubt, substantially what Dos Passos saw, but it took his bold realism to disentangle their recollections from the prevailing buncombe and sentimentality."[2]

gollark: That would TECHNICALLY not involve ceasing your drinking. It would just be very slow drinking after some point.
gollark: I mean, at the extreme end, if you consume hangover-inducing quantities of alcohol then, say, 1 microliter per minute, you'd have a hangover.
gollark: Really? That seems implausible.
gollark: Do not consume alcohol, or you will have consumed alcohol.
gollark: You've doomed us all.

References

  1. "Main Page - ArticleWorld". Eldritchpress.org. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  2. Henry Louis Mencken, "Portrait of an American Citizen," Smart Set, 69 (October 1922) 140-2, in Willa Cather: The Contemporary Reviews, ed. Margaret Anne O'Conner, Cambridge UP, 2001 (141–143)


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