Through the Wheat: A Novel: A Library of America eBook Classic
A neglected classic of World War I fiction that offers an unflinching depiction of the physical and psychological cost of modern warfare

Thomas Boyd drew on his own experiences with the Marines at Belleau Wood, Soissons, and St. Mihiel to tell the story of William Hicks, an infantryman fighting in France in 1918. Hicks endures hunger, thirst, cold, heat, and fatigue as his platoon advances through dense woods and open fields in the face of hidden machine guns and sudden artillery bombardments, experiencing alternating states of fear, nausea, fury, and apathy until he becomes “impervious to the demands of the dead and the living.”
 
When it was first published, Through the Wheat was hailed by F. Scott Fitzgerald as “the best war book since The Red Badge of Courage,” and by Edmund Wilson as “probably the most authentic novel yet written by an American about war”; fifty years later, James Dickey praised it as “a war book of the most striking and moving kind.”
1128512061
Through the Wheat: A Novel: A Library of America eBook Classic
A neglected classic of World War I fiction that offers an unflinching depiction of the physical and psychological cost of modern warfare

Thomas Boyd drew on his own experiences with the Marines at Belleau Wood, Soissons, and St. Mihiel to tell the story of William Hicks, an infantryman fighting in France in 1918. Hicks endures hunger, thirst, cold, heat, and fatigue as his platoon advances through dense woods and open fields in the face of hidden machine guns and sudden artillery bombardments, experiencing alternating states of fear, nausea, fury, and apathy until he becomes “impervious to the demands of the dead and the living.”
 
When it was first published, Through the Wheat was hailed by F. Scott Fitzgerald as “the best war book since The Red Badge of Courage,” and by Edmund Wilson as “probably the most authentic novel yet written by an American about war”; fifty years later, James Dickey praised it as “a war book of the most striking and moving kind.”
7.99 In Stock
Through the Wheat: A Novel: A Library of America eBook Classic

Through the Wheat: A Novel: A Library of America eBook Classic

by Thomas Boyd
Through the Wheat: A Novel: A Library of America eBook Classic

Through the Wheat: A Novel: A Library of America eBook Classic

by Thomas Boyd

eBookDigital original (Digital original)

$7.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

A neglected classic of World War I fiction that offers an unflinching depiction of the physical and psychological cost of modern warfare

Thomas Boyd drew on his own experiences with the Marines at Belleau Wood, Soissons, and St. Mihiel to tell the story of William Hicks, an infantryman fighting in France in 1918. Hicks endures hunger, thirst, cold, heat, and fatigue as his platoon advances through dense woods and open fields in the face of hidden machine guns and sudden artillery bombardments, experiencing alternating states of fear, nausea, fury, and apathy until he becomes “impervious to the demands of the dead and the living.”
 
When it was first published, Through the Wheat was hailed by F. Scott Fitzgerald as “the best war book since The Red Badge of Courage,” and by Edmund Wilson as “probably the most authentic novel yet written by an American about war”; fifty years later, James Dickey praised it as “a war book of the most striking and moving kind.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781598535952
Publisher: Library of America
Publication date: 04/17/2018
Series: Library of America E-Book Classics
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 155
File size: 848 KB

About the Author

Thomas Alexander Boyd (1898–1935) was born in Defiance, Ohio. While still in school, he enlisted in the US Marine Corps and saw service in France, where he was the victim of a gas attack in 1918. He later wrote for newspapers in Minneapolis and St. Paul, and was the author of numerous novels, stories, and historical biographies.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews