Author:Jean-Yves Le Naour
The remarkably powerful and moving true story of a soldier who lost his memory and identity during World War I, and of a people in mourning, who found in him the symbol of a lost generation.
Released from a German POW camp with no memory of his name or his past life and no documents or distinguishing marks to identify him, the soldier was given the name Anthelme Mangin, and sent to an asylum for the insane. With the end of the Great War, a newspaper advertisement placed in the hope of finding his lost family found instead a bereaved multitude ready to claim him as the father, son, husband or brother who had never come home.
With humane sympathy and the skill of a novelist, Jean Yves Le Naour meticulously recreates the twenty-year court battles waged over the Living Unknown Soldier. Poignant, psychologically penetrating, and profoundly revealing of the human cost of war, this remarkable book portrays not just the fate of one individual but a nation's inconsolable post-war grief and profoundly illuminates the nature of mourning.
This hauntingly emblematic story reads like something Sebald would have taken up and absorbed.
—— TelegraphThere is no doubting the author's immense scholarship... He has a first-class understanding of strategy and tactics
—— Simon Heffer , Literary ReviewDeserves to become the standard work on the desert war in 1942
—— Richard Holmes'Desperately sad and powerful...Unforgettable'
—— Jewish TelegraphUnforgettable... Antony Beevor and Luba Vinogradova have recovered nothing less than a lost classic of reportage
—— Sean McCarthy , The ScotsmanGrossman was above all a clear-eyed and generous witness to the human cost of war, civilians and soldiers of both sides, the lost women and broken men; in the very highest order of journalistic achievement, he was as alert to the victims as much as to the heroes his audience was required to read about
—— David Flusfeder , Daily TelegraphImpeccably edited, the commentary as informative as it is unobtrusive.
—— Robert Chandler , Financial TimesIn bringing his notebooks to a wider audience, and in reminding us about this brilliant witness, Beevor and Vinogradova have done their readers - and Grossman's memory - a great service
—— Independent'Nicholas Stargardt evokes the individual voices of children under Nazi rule. In re-creating their wartime experiences, he has produced a challenging new historical interpretation of the Second World War
—— History Today