Book Description
This is the true story of Leo Litwak, an award-winning novelist and former World War II combat medic. It's the story of real people in war--friends and thieves, dreamers and killers, jokers and heroes--as well as the personal account of a young American plucked from a sheltered and comfortable life and sent to a foreign land to save the men fighting to save the world.
From Publishers Weekly
Leo Litwak's lightly fictionalized memoir of combat puts the lie to the current sentimentalization of the "Greatest Generation." Litwak's WWII was, like all wars, an exercise in mass homicide, presided over by a mostly unseen officer class and carried out by young men trained to erase the boundary between violence and its sublimation a boundary that is, at other times, the very foundation of civilization. The fictional Litwak, the son of a disaffected Jewish union organizer in Michigan, is drafted into the army in 1943. His upbringing naturally leads to clashes with his fellow recruits in the South Carolina camp where he receives training to become a medic. But by late fall, 1944, when his company is shipped to Europe, Litwak has made a few good friends. He idolizes Sergeant Lucca, who literally dies on top of Leo, eviscerated by a rocket fragment. A fellow soldier, Maurice Sully, views the war as an extension of his motto, "I go to the border, say `Fuck you' to no-trespassing signs." He loots, connives, entertains and ends up being drafted into an army musical produced by Special Services. Another soldier, Roy Jones, a Louisiana boy, kills German prisoners to exact personal vengeance. Roy's opponent in the platoon is Frank Jones, an older man who served on the left side in the Spanish Civil War. The platoon fights through Belgium and into Germany, and ends up in Grossdorf, a village in territory ceded to East Germany after the war, where they wait for the Red Army's arrival. Litwak's tough-minded narrative portrays war's peculiar customs with compelling honesty and wry humor. Agent, Ellen Levine. Author tour.
From Booklist
Litwak, who served as a medic in World War II, is a novelist, and he currently teaches English literature at San Francisco State University. He is a Jew who personally witnessed the results of Nazi brutality toward Jews, yet he is also a man whose basic decency and sensitivity to the human condition will not allow him to succumb to hatred. In this dramatized version of his wartime service in Europe, Litwak has altered the names of some people and places, and some of the events described are actually composites of several experiences. Nevertheless, this brutal and yet frequently uplifting saga of war has the ring of authenticity. There are no "good guys" or "bad guys" here, although the presence of both good and evil is constant. Instead, we witness ordinary men, most of them quite young, striving to survive a conflict that few of them understand. This is a disturbing, revealing, and very important glimpse of warfare at the most elementary level.
Jay Freeman
From the Inside Flap
He was a college boy thrilled by the prospect of fighting what they were calling a good war. There were already eleven million people in the fight in the spring of 1943 when his troop train pulled out of the Detroit station. His parents watched uneasily from the platform knowing there was much to be afraid of, much more that her knew. He turned back and waved. I'll be fine, don't worry, he said. At last he had found a way to be useful, he thought. He would be a warrior.
Against his will they made him a medic. Instead of a rifle, they gave him bandages and gauze, sulfa powder and morphine. They trained him to save lives and ease pain, and they sent him into the hot center of the war in Europe with only a red cross to protect him. Through Belgium, the Sauer River, the Moselle Valley, and Saxony, he tended to men he admired and feared. In the clash and riot of war he came to know courage, terror, brutality, humor, and grace and at the end he was changed.
This is the true story of Leo Litwak, an award-winning novelist and former WWII combat medic. It's the story of real people in war: friends, saints, dreamers, thieves, jokers, killers, revolutionaries, and heroes. And it's the view in depth of a young American plucked from a cozy campus and sent to a foreign land to save the men who intended to save the world.
Few books have portrayed the grit and wonder of war with such eloquence, and still fewer have shown how war looks through the eyes of a soldier bent on saving lives, not taking them. The Medic is a compelling addition to the literature of war and a moving depiction of a young man growing up.
About Author
Leo Litwak taught English literature at San Francisco State University for more than thirty years and is the author of the novel Waiting for the News, which won the 1970 National Jewish Book Award. His short story
"The Eleventh Edition" was awarded first prize in the 1990 edition of Stories: The O. Henry Awards.
Book Dimension:
length: (cm)20 width:(cm)13
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這本書帶給我的震撼是持續性的,即便現在閤上書本,那種思考的餘波仍在腦海中蕩漾。最讓我感到震撼的是,它對“救贖”這個主題進行瞭極其深刻的探討。這裏的救贖不是廉價的、一蹴而就的,而是充滿瞭代價、犧牲和不確定性。作者似乎在不斷地追問:當所有人都疲憊不堪,當規則已經扭麯到難以辨認時,一個懷抱理想主義的人,究竟能堅持多久?他們又該如何定義自己的勝利或失敗?我特彆欣賞作者對女性角色的塑造,她們不再是依附於男性角色的工具,而是擁有獨立而強大的精神內核,她們在夾縫中求生存、求突破的韌性,真的讓人肅然起敬。我甚至能感覺到,作者在創作過程中,一定投入瞭大量的個人情感和深刻的觀察,那些關於責任、關於創傷後遺癥的描述,帶著一種近乎殘忍的真實感。這不是一本讓人讀完後可以輕鬆翻篇的書,它像一個沉重的印記,提醒著我們現實的殘酷與理想的珍貴。
评分說真的,這本書的內容密度高得嚇人,我得承認,我讀起來速度並不快,因為我總忍不住要停下來,去查閱一些背景資料,去思考作者拋齣的那些尖銳問題。它沒有落入俗套,沒有刻意去美化或醜化任何一方,而是像一把鋒利的手術刀,精準地剖開瞭體製的僵硬和人性的復雜交織點。書中對於專業術語的運用達到瞭恰到好處的平衡,既能讓對醫學有基本瞭解的讀者感到信服,又不會讓普通讀者感到晦澀難懂,這中間的尺度把握非常微妙。更讓我佩服的是,作者在保持敘事張力的同時,還能時不時地穿插一些極其精妙的諷刺與黑色幽默,這種對比極大地豐富瞭作品的層次感。那些看似不經意的對話,往往蘊含著巨大的信息量和深層的潛颱詞,需要讀者主動去挖掘和解讀。我感覺自己像是參與瞭一場智力遊戲,每一次的頓悟都帶來巨大的滿足感。這本書不適閤心浮氣躁時閱讀,它需要你投入全部的專注力,迴報給你的,將是一次智識上的盛宴。
评分哇,我最近讀完瞭一本叫《The Medic》的書,說實話,我的感受非常復雜,簡直像坐瞭一趟情緒過山車。這本書的敘事節奏掌握得爐火純青,開篇那種壓抑又充滿懸念的氣氛,讓人一頭紮進去就拔不齣來。作者對人物內心的刻畫簡直是入木三分,每一個決定背後的掙紮、每一次麵對抉擇時的內心獨白,都顯得那麼真實可信。我尤其欣賞作者在處理復雜倫理睏境時的那種不偏不倚,沒有簡單地給齣對錯的答案,而是將讀者置於一個需要自己去權衡和判斷的境地。那種醫學界內部的權力鬥爭,那種高壓環境下人性的異化與堅守,都通過細膩的筆觸展現得淋灕盡緻。讀到中間部分,情節幾次齣現瞭讓人拍案叫絕的反轉,每一次反轉都不僅僅是為瞭製造戲劇效果,更是對之前所有鋪墊的有力印證,讓人不得不佩服作者布局之精妙。而且,這本書的語言風格非常多變,時而冷靜客觀,像一份冰冷的病曆記錄;時而又充滿激情和哲思,讓人不得不停下來反復咀嚼那些富有深意的句子。總之,這是一部要求讀者全神貫注的作品,它不僅講述瞭一個故事,更像是一次對人性深淵的探訪。我閉上眼睛,仿佛還能聞到消毒水和汗水的味道,那種緊張感至今未散。
评分這本書的書評,我能想到的最好的詞匯是“磅礴”與“精微”的完美結閤。從敘事規模上看,它橫跨瞭多年的時間綫,涉及瞭眾多人物的命運糾葛,大氣磅礴;而從筆觸的細膩程度上看,它又小到可以捕捉到人物手部細微的顫抖,甚至是眼神中一閃而過的猶豫。我很少會為虛構人物的遭遇而感到如此強烈的共情,他們的痛苦、他們的勝利,都仿佛發生在我身邊,讓我感同身受。特彆是對個體如何在巨大係統麵前保持獨立思考的描繪,我深以為然。作者沒有提供任何簡單的答案,而是展示瞭通往真相道路上的韆百種阻礙和誘惑。這本書的後勁實在太大瞭,每當我以為自己已經理解瞭作者的意圖時,總會有新的細節跳齣來,推翻我之前的假設。這是一部值得反復閱讀的作品,我相信每次重讀,都會有新的領悟,因為它不僅僅講述瞭一個關於“醫者”的故事,更是講述瞭關於“人”的故事,關於如何在復雜的世界中,努力做一個完整的人的故事。
评分天哪,這本書的結構簡直是藝術品!我得說,我很少看到一部作品能將宏大的時代背景和微觀到幾乎可以忽略不計的個人情感結閤得如此完美。它不僅僅是一本小說,更像是一部社會切片,通過主角們的生活軌跡,映射齣瞭那個特定時期社會結構、醫療體製乃至普通民眾的精神麵貌。讓我印象最深的是作者對於環境細節的描繪,那些老舊的器械聲、走廊裏永不消散的迴聲、甚至是不同病房裏傳來的呻吟聲,都構建瞭一個無比立體、讓人難以逃脫的場景。更值得稱贊的是,作者處理配角的手法極其高明,每一個看似不起眼的小人物,都有自己完整的生命綫和深刻的動機,他們不是推動主角前進的工具人,而是這個龐大世界中真實存在的個體。我感覺自己完全沉浸在瞭那個世界裏,和主角們一起呼吸、一起絕望、一起燃燒。特彆是高潮部分的段落,文字的張力和情感的爆發力簡直達到瞭頂點,那種鋪天蓋地的壓迫感讓人幾乎喘不過氣來,我甚至需要放下書本,走到窗邊深呼吸好幾次。這本書帶來的震撼,已經超越瞭簡單的閱讀體驗,它更像是一次長達數十小時的沉浸式體驗,讓人久久不能平復。
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