Review
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“This is a former warrior’s haunting meditation on
the terrible, yet often necessary, destructiveness of total
warfare. Written with passion and fidelity, The Boys’ Crusade is
a book that will not leave you after you have put it down. If
there is a more powerful personal account of the ground war in
Western Europe I have yet to encounter it.” —Donald L. Miller,
author of The Story of World War II
“No one writes about war with greater authenticity and eloquence
than Paul Fussell. The Boys’ Crusade is an extraordinarily
powerful account that is at once poignant and searing. It is a
truth-telling of a very high order from one of our finest men of
letters.” —Rick Atkinson, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of An
Army at Dawn
“Fussell writes vividly and sardonically . . . painting
extraordinary scenes at every turn. . . . A bracing corrective .
. . and just right for a new season of war.” —Kirkus Reviews
(starred review)
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From the Inside Flap
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"The Boys' Crusade is the great historian Paul
Fussell's unflinching and unforgettable account of the American
infantryman's experiences in Europe during World War II. Based in
part on the author's own experiences, it provides a stirring
narrative of what the war was actually like, from the point of
view of the children--for children they were--who fought it.
While dealing definitively with issues of strategy, leadership,
context, and tactics, Fussell has an additional purpose: to tear
away the veil of feel-good mythology that so often obscures and
sanitizes war's brutal essence.
"A chronicle should deal with nothing but the truth," Fussell
writes in his Preface. Accord-ingly, he eschews every kind of
sentimentalism, focusing instead on the raw action and human
emotion triggered by the intimacy, horror, and intense sorrows of
war, and honestly addressing the errors, waste, fear, misery, and
resentments that plagued both sides. In the vast literature on
World War II, "The Boys' Crusade stands wholly apart. Fussell's
profoundly honest portrayal of these boy soldiers underscores
their bravery even as it deepens our awareness of their
experiences. This book is both a tribute to their noble service
and a valuable lesson for future generations.
"From the Hardcover edition.
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About the Author
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Paul Fussell is the author of fifteen books,
including Wartime: Understanding and Behavior in the Second World
War and The Great War and Modern Memory, which won the National
Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award and was
named by the Modern Library as one of the twentieth century’s 100
best nonfiction books. He taught literature for many years at the
University of Pennsylvania and Rutgers University. He lives in
Philadelphia with his wife.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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The Boy Crusaders
When Ike Eisenhower was a boy, European history was more avidly
pursued in schools than now, and it’s also possible that he knew
a bit about the Crusades from his own reading, if he hadn’t heard
about them in church—his family was pious—or at elementary or
high school or even at West Point. In any event, the imagery of
the Crusades was lodged strongly in his mind. In an Order of the
Day given or read to “Soldiers, Sailors, and Air- men of the
Allied Expeditionary Force,” just before the invasion of
Normandy, he informed them: “You are about to embark upon the
Great Crusade, toward which we have striven these many months.”
And, once successfully over, he would title his memoir of the war
Crusade in Europe.
Eisenhower was not the only one conscious during the war of the
Crusades. One of the enemy, Panzer leader Hans von Luck, had
occasion three times to recall a poem about a moment in
the Crusades whose horrors resembled those he witnessed in the
Falaise Pocket in 1944. He writes, “ ‘Man, horse, and truck, by
the Lord were struck.’ This saying, from a poem on the battles of
the Crusaders in Palestine about 1213, had come to my mind twice
before: in December, 1941, by Moscow, and in 1943 in North
Africa.”
The date 1213 suggests the so-called Children’s Crusade, about
whose actuality some historians have doubts. In the year 1212, it
is said, an odd army set out from France and Germany. Its purpose
was to liberate the Holy Land from the profane grip of Islam.
This Crusade is reputed to have numbered fifty thousand young
people, of whom only three thousand survived the attentions of
pirates, slave dealers, and brothel keepers. Whether actual or
mythical, the Children’s Crusade can’t help suggesting many
dimensions of American youth’s curious, violent journey eastward
over France and Germany in the Second World War. Kurt Vonnegut
invokes The Children’s Crusade as a sardonic alternative title
for his novel Slaughterhouse Five, which measures many
significant features of that war and those “children.”
I intend no disrespect to the memory of Dwight D. Eisenhower by
examining his term crusade. It made some sense at the moment,
even if many of the still unblooded troops were likely to
ridicule it. If they read or heard the Supreme Commander’s words
at all, they were doubtless embarrassed to have so highfalutin a
term applied to their forthcoming performances and their feelings
about them. It is likely that many never saw the sheet of paper
on which the word appeared, and if the message was read to them
(in the wind and the rain), their experience so far had
inclined them to greet all official utterances with scorn and
skepticism. Indeed, when such pronouncements were read aloud they
often ridiculed them noisily, until silenced by a sergeant’s “At
ease!”
At this distance, it may not be easy to remember that the
European ground war in the west was largely fought by American
boys seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen years old. At seventeen
you could enlist if you had your parents’ written permission, but
most boys waited until they were drafted at age eighteen.
(Actually, the army contained numerous illicit
seventeen-year-olds, their presence as soldiers more or less
regularized by false papers not rigorously inquired into.) Some
of these men-children shaved but many did not need to. Robert
Kotlowitz remembers bayonet drill. “We ed, thrust, slashed or
whichever—screaming ‘Kill! Kill!’ in our teen-age voices.” Not a
few soldiers hopeful of food packages from home specified Animal
Crackers, which, one soldier said, “can do wonders for low
morale.” (Perhaps what troops were recalling when seeking this
specialty was eight-year-old Shirley Temple singing “Animal
Crackers in My Soup.”) At the same time, the infantrymen, not yet
versed in the adult conventions of the high-class uses of wine,
did not wait until after dinner to sip a little cognac. In
quantity, it often replaced water in their canteens.
Who were these boys, who bitched freely but seldom cried, even
when wounded? What did they have in common? Most had sufficient
emotional control not to express angry envy of those (like, say,
nonflying air corps troops) who had a nicer, safer war.
These infantry soldiers, if they weren’t children, weren’t quite
men either, even if officers commonly addressed groups of them as
such. One medical aidman was typical in referring to his patients
as boys. Explaining in a letter home the workings of the
casualty-clearing system, he falls naturally into phrases like
these—a boy gets hurt; the injured boy; leaves space for another
boy; the wounded boy; as each boy comes in; a brief history of
the boy and his diagnosis—the last of which refers to the
official tag fastened to the soldier’s jacket or, as our aidman
puts it, to “the boy’s coat.” Wounded officers passing through
the aid station were never called boys, although many were almost
as young.
Taken as a whole, the boys had a powerful propulsion of optimism,
a sense that the war couldn’t last forever, and that if anyone
was going to get wounded, it would not be them. They had a common
ability to simulate courage despite actuality: that is, a certain
a of dramatic talent, plus a vivid appreciation of black
humor, involving plenty of irony. They had sufficient physical
stamina to survive zero-degree cold from time to time, and
considerable elementary camping skills of the sort common among
civilian fishermen and hunters, which lots of survivors became
after the war. They had to have fine eye, good enough to
detect ed antipersonnel mines by their little triggers of
thin wire protruding aboveground. They had to have a pack rat’s
skill in collecting small objects, like looted knives and forks.
And preeminently, they had to have extraordinary luck. One
infantryman’s mother exhorted him to be careful. He answered:
“You can’t be careful. You can only be lucky.”
And these young troops got along with each other because they
usually shared certain beliefs:
1. America is the best country in the world because
it is the only really modern one.
2. It is the world leader in technology, producing
the bulk of the good cars, and, in unbelievably large quantities,
airplanes and tanks, which, being the best in the world, are
going to win the war. They are certainly better than anything the
Germans and the Japs can make. (Only the brightest and boldest of
the troops perceived that American tanks were seriously outned
by German ones and, when struck by a shell, were likely to burst
into flames, almost as a matter of course. This tendency earned
them the name Ronsons, after the popular lighter.)
Among the troops, only the finely tuned noted the superiority of
the German machine s. Discovery of these facts was
demoralizing, and a problem confronting the brighter U.S.
infantrymen was rationalizing away these sorry truths when among
dumber people.
3. The American army, despite its screwups, is the
best ever in providing the troops with clothing, food, lodging,
personal weapons, and security.
These credulous youths were the products of American high
schools, and differences of race, religion, and social class did
not significantly alter their adherence to this code of belief
nor influence their common hatreds, which can be specified as
follows:
1. Officers of any kind, especially those not to a
degree redeemed by sharing troops’ hardships, and those pursuing
in wartime their peacetime professions in uniform, like medicine,
optometry, or medical administration. These phonies were granted
officer rank and beautiful dress uniforms without having to
undergo the usual price of painful infantry training.
2. The French, and quite justly too: they spoke a
language impossible to learn and embarrassing to pronounce, and
worse, they required the help of strangers (especially Americans)
to win their wars, both the First World War and this one. In his
most famous harangue of the troops, General Patton had enunciated
the American view of people who lose wars or battles: “Americans
love a winner. Americans will not tolerate a loser.” And the
French of all types were distinctly snotty toward their saviors.
3. Stay-at-homes exempt from the war by virtue of
largely invisible ailments, like punctured eardrums, high blood
pressure, flat feet, or a “nervous condition.” Even self-
procled “sexuality.”
4. Anyone occupying in combat a position to the rear
of the infantryman. Included are soldiers in the artillery, all
engineers except combat engineers, and certainly the various
staff, afraid to visit the line and to see what’s actually
happening there.
historian Roger Spiller, who has spent decades studying
the embarrassing actualities of battle, quotes with approval
Bernard Knox, who writes, “It is true of every war that much as
he may fear and perhaps even hate the enemy sing him, the
combat infantryman broods with deep and bitter resentment over
the enormous number of people in his rear who safely at
night.” And it was an enormous number. Spiller explains: “Of the
millions of Americans sent overseas by the Army during World War
II, only 14 percent were infantrymen. Those 14 percent took more
than 70 percent of all the battle casualties among overseas
troops.” As Captain Harold P. Leinbaugh, author of the memoir The
Men of Company K, procls, “We were the Willie Lomans of the
war.” Or, as some coarser speakers have put it, “the niggers.”
Soldiers who fought in North Africa and Southern Italy, struck by
the squalor and filth of the peasants, thought of them as “the
Infantry of the World.”
“Adolescent fervor” is Robert Kotlowitz’s term for those
characteristics of male youth that can be honed and intensified
by training. “The Army understood that fervor and used
it,” he writes. “All armies do; they depend upon it.” Adolescent
fervor in the form it assumed be- fore bullets and artillery and
mines ruined it is pleasantly registered by Edward W. Wood Jr.,
an enthusiastic—no, ecstatic—soldier as he participated in the
victorious pursuit of the enemy in late August 1944:
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