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Theme Changer

 Topic: Testament of Youth

 (Read 1767 times)
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  • Testament of Youth
     OP - January 20, 2012, 12:16 PM

    http://www.amazon.com/product-reviews/0860680355/ref=cm_cr_dp_syn_footer?showViewpoints=1&k=Testament%20of%20Youth%3A%20An%20Autobiographical%20Study%20of%20the%20Years%201900-1925%20%28Virago%20classic%20non-fiction%29

    Quote
    'A unique record of one woman's experience of twenty-five of the most cataclysmic years in modern history.' - T.L.S. 'A haunting elegy for a lost generation.' - THE TIMES "Nothing else in the literature of the first world war charts so clearly the path leading from erosion of innocence, with the destruction of the public school boy's heroic illusions, to the survivors' final disillusionment that the sacrifice of the dead had been in vain." - MARK BOSTERIDGE, GUARDIAN

    'In 1914 Vera Brittain was 21 years old, and an undergraduate student at Somerville College, Oxford. When war broke out in August of that year, Brittain "temporarily" disrupted her studies to enrol as a volunteer nurse, nursing casualties both in England and on the Western Front. The next four years were to cause a deep rupture in Brittain's life, as she witnessed not only the horrors of war first hand, but also experienced the quadruple loss of her fiance, her brother, and two close friends. Testament of Youth is a powerfully written, unsentimental memoir which has continued to move and enthral readers since its first publication in 1933.

    Brittain, a pacifist since her First World War experiences, prefaces the book with a fairy tale, in which Catherine, the heroine, encounters a fairy godmother and is given the choice of having either a happy youth or a happy old age. She selects the latter and so her fate is determined: "Now this woman," warns the tale, "was the destiny of poor Catherine." And we find as we delve deeper into the book that she was the destiny of poor Vera too.' -

    AMAZON.CO.UK 'Miss Brittain has written a book which stands alone among books written by women about the war.' - SUNDAY TIMES 'Desperately heartrending personal account of a generation of young men being killed on the Western Front in the First World War.' - SIR BERNARD INGHAM, SUNDAY EXPRESS


    I strongly recommend this for people to understand what the British are about and why we do not do religion

    Quote
    The word "classic" gets thrown around a lot these days. Many so-called "modern classics" are not that important, but "Testament of Youth" deserves this reprint as a Penguin Classic. Brittain tells of her early life in the north of England between 1893 and the start of World War I in 1914 in beautifully clear prose, and her clarity of thought and powers of observation make the bulk of the book, dealing with the war's impact on her, painfully vivid without ever lapsing into self-pity. Like too many others of her generation (and the next and the next) Vera Brittain learned almost unimaginable lessons about life and her own inner strength. To that extent, "Testament of Youth" can serve as both example and inspiration.

    Vera Brittain came from an upper-middle-class background shared by millions of young women in late Victorian England. One thing that made her different was her great intellectual curiosity and determination to escape a truly suffocating existence that few of today's Western women can easily imagine.

    What made her like most citizens of the time (and of later times)was her complete ignorance of the meaning of "war." Patriotism, her social conscience, and a desire to take part in the bigger world led her to volunteer as a nursing sister with the British Army. Her grueling hospital experiences were a revelation to her. Her personal losses are even more powerfully revealing of the human condition. Brittain was a "survivor" in every sense of the word.

    "Testament of Youth" is just as fresh and moving today as it was when it was written 75 years ago and Vera Brittain tells a story that must be told and retold to each generation. For every reader who finds the book "too long" by current standards (its almost 700 pages), there will be two who wish they could follow the author even further. But even if you find yourself skipping ahead, particularly in the early part, you will not be able to forget Vera Brittain or her story. "Testament of Youth" is one of the great autobiographies of the past 100 years.


    When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain, and you Think of Things, you find sometimes that a Thing which seemed very Thingish inside you is quite different when it gets out into the open and has other people looking at it.


    A.A. Milne,

    "We cannot slaughter each other out of the human impasse"
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