[Sword of Honour Trilogy:] Men at Arms; Officers and Gentlemen; Unconditional Surrender.
£1,250 · Offered by Shapero Rare Books
Possibly the best novel series of the Second World War, loosely mirroring Waugh's own wartime experience. In an attempt to exorcise his own demons, Guy Crouchback, the heir of a declining aristocratic English Roman Catholic family, decides to join the toughest commando in the British Army. In an almost grotesque quest for heroism, this quintessentially English figure hopes to find in war the opportunity to materialise his belief in the values of tradition and courage. But this idealistic search for chivalrous adventures will soon be disappointed by the painful realisation that the aristocracy of arms is filled with disreputable cowards. The trilogy is a great illustration of Waugh's satiric style. It depicts life in the British Army and the wasteful bureaucracy of modern warfare in a very ironic fashion. But behind bitter comedy, the novels are still deeply rooted in reality. Waugh used areas of conflict in the Second World War from where he had personal experience, and gave up any attempt to describe campaigns at which he had not been present. Thus one can find echoes of his own participation in the war, whether it be his involvement in the Dakar expedition, his stint with the commandos or his time in Crete and Yugoslavia. Originally published as three separate but linked novels - Men at Arms (1952), Officers and Gentlemen (1955) and Unconditional Surrender (1961) - Sword of Honour appeared in 1965, just a few months before its author's death at Easter 1966. British literary
- Binding: Hardcover
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