✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

Under Fire

Under Fire

Among the earliest realistic depictions of trench warfare, this novel is based on author Henri Barbusse's World War I combat experiences. The journal-like anecdotes portray daily life amid a squad of French volunteers after their country's invasion by Germany. The soldiers are workers, farmers, and tradesmen from different regions of France. They emerge as individuals, with families, good traits and bad, hopes, and fears. Their tedious days in fetid trenches are punctuated by terrifying battles and the threats of poison gas, artillery bombardment, sniper attacks, and machine-gun fire.
Under Fire received French literature's prestigious Prix Goncourt for fiction in 1916 and drew both acclaim and criticism for its harsh realism. A century later, it remains a compelling and psychologically revealing work that exposes the horror, the loss, and the incomprehensible nature of war, even to its participants. Barbusse's wartime ordeals led to his lifelong pacifism, and his novel ranks among the first and most insightful indictments of imperialist warfare.

An unabridged republication of the work originally published by Flammarion, Paris, in 1916 and translated by Fitzwater Wray and published by E. P. Dutton & Co., New York, in 1917.
World War One; Western front; War fiction; Henri  Barbusse; Under Fire; Trench Warfare; 20th Century Novels; France in fiction; World War One fiction
$8.00
Under Fire
$8.00
Product image 1

Description

Among the earliest realistic depictions of trench warfare, this novel is based on author Henri Barbusse's World War I combat experiences. The journal-like anecdotes portray daily life amid a squad of French volunteers after their country's invasion by Germany. The soldiers are workers, farmers, and tradesmen from different regions of France. They emerge as individuals, with families, good traits and bad, hopes, and fears. Their tedious days in fetid trenches are punctuated by terrifying battles and the threats of poison gas, artillery bombardment, sniper attacks, and machine-gun fire.
Under Fire received French literature's prestigious Prix Goncourt for fiction in 1916 and drew both acclaim and criticism for its harsh realism. A century later, it remains a compelling and psychologically revealing work that exposes the horror, the loss, and the incomprehensible nature of war, even to its participants. Barbusse's wartime ordeals led to his lifelong pacifism, and his novel ranks among the first and most insightful indictments of imperialist warfare.

An unabridged republication of the work originally published by Flammarion, Paris, in 1916 and translated by Fitzwater Wray and published by E. P. Dutton & Co., New York, in 1917.
World War One; Western front; War fiction; Henri  Barbusse; Under Fire; Trench Warfare; 20th Century Novels; France in fiction; World War One fiction

You may also like

Thumbnail 1

1001 Most Useful Spanish Words

$2.25

-65%
Thumbnail 1

1001 Palabras Inglesas Mas Utiles para Hispanoparlantes

$1.99

$0.70

-65%
Thumbnail 1

100 Favorite English and Irish Poems

$3.00

$1.05

Thumbnail 1

101 Great American Poems

$3.00

-65%
Thumbnail 1

100 Best-Loved Poems

$3.00

$1.05

Thumbnail 1

100 Great American Short Stories

$14.00

-65%
Thumbnail 1

"Easter 1916" and Other Poems

$3.00

$1.05

-65%
Thumbnail 1

1000 Poems from the Manyoshu

$19.95

$6.98

Thumbnail 1

103 Great Poems

$12.95

-65%
Thumbnail 1

1001 Easy French Phrases

$4.95

$1.73

Thumbnail 1

1300 Real and Fanciful Animals

$15.95

-65%
Thumbnail 1

1000 Turn-of-the-Century Houses

$18.95

$6.63