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#greatwar
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Maggie4483
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Deep sigh 😔

This was written in the 1930s - but switch out some of the words and it sounds remarkably similar to….well, you know.

Ruthiella 🙁🙁🙁 6h
11 likes1 comment
blurb
squirrelbrain
The Remembered Soldier | Anjet Daanje
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Another 4 books on the National Book Awards longlist. I had no idea the tagged book was such a chunkster until it arrived!

I also have 2 on order from eBay but they‘re not arriving for a few weeks yet.

I‘m reading The Antidote in print - it‘s too early to say what I think yet. I‘m also listening to The Sisters on audio and, goodness me, it‘s long! 😬

AnneCecilie The Sisters is amazing and worth its length 5d
squirrelbrain I‘m quite a long way through it @annececilie and usually I don‘t mind a lot of detail but it‘s just starting to grate on me a little bit. 😬 5d
AnneCecilie @squirrelbrain I love details and have also read several of his previous novels and enjoyed them. 5d
See All 6 Comments
Hooked_on_books I‘m also listening to The Sisters on audio! I‘m at the 60% mark and so far I‘m a little underwhelmed. I really feel like the first half didn‘t know whether to center the narrator or the sisters and ended up a little disjointed. I don‘t know that I would have made it through in print. And I didn‘t know the tagged was so chunky, either! 😱 4d
squirrelbrain I‘m probably around the same point as you @Hooked_on_books - I‘m struggling with knowing / understanding the timescales as it seems to jump about all over the place. Funnily enough a blurb on the bag of the tagged book says ‘not a moment too long‘ (or wtef)! 😜 4d
BarbaraBB The Dutch one is a chunkster but she‘s such a good writer. You‘ll probably fly through it! 4d
56 likes6 comments
review
Mattsbookaday
The Remembered Soldier | Anjet Daanje
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Pickpick

The Remembered Soldier, by Anjet Daanje (2019, transl. 2025)

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Premise: A former soldier experiencing severe amnesia and PTSD struggles to recover his memories and life after he is brought home from an asylum by a woman who identifies him as her husband.

Review: This is a stunning, deeply moving literary love story that will reward patient readers. ⬇️

Mattsbookaday I say patient because it‘s well over 500 pages long, and it employs long, run-on sentences and paragraphs. But the pay-off is beyond worth any annoyance. This will almost certainly be among my top reads of the year.

Bookish Pair: The Housekeeper and the Professor, by Yoko Ogawa (2005, transl. 2009)
3w
BarbaraBB Great review. I loved The Housekeeper and Daanjes other book (which hasn‘t been published in English yet) so this is a must read for me! (edited) 3w
13 likes2 stack adds2 comments
review
Trace
Pickpick

Great unbiased history.

blurb
Suzie
Loyal Creatures | Morris Gleitzman
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Where I talk through the love/hate of Loyal Creatures by Morris Gleitzman
https://www.suzs-space.com/loyal-creatures-morris-gleitzman/

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SaraBeagle
Fear: A Novel of World War I | Gabriel Chevallier
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"The horror of war resides in this gnawing anxiety. It resides in the continuation, the incessant repetition of danger. War is permanent threat. 'We know not the place or the hour.' But we know the place exists and the hour will come. It is insane to hope that we will always escape."

12 likes1 stack add
review
Anna40
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Pickpick

This book about the hospital Craiglockhart & two of its most famous patients, Siegfried Sassoon & Wilfred Owen, tracks the effects of industrial warfare on soldiers & the origins of PTSD. Shell shock was seen by many commanding officers not as an illness but cowardice& thus punished. It was thanks to physicians such as Dr Rivers who treated the men with compassion that some lucky few found healing. The strongest parts of the book are the poems

Anna40 written by Sassoon & Owens. I also enjoyed learning about the pacifist movement in the UK & how the war was perceived by those not involved in combat. Overall, the men who received treatment all had very privileged backgrounds, the poor private was sent right back to the front without any compassion or treatment … 8mo
Suet624 Ugh. So sad. 8mo
CarolynM Stacked🙂 8mo
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Anna40 @suet624 yes, it is. I think many more than we think still believe PTSD in soldiers = coward or is something to be ashamed of 😢 8mo
Anna40 @CarolynM it‘s not an easy read but it really pulled me in. I‘m interested in reading Sassoon‘s and Owens poetry collections. Very powerful poems 8mo
CarolynM I‘ve got a particular interest in First World War literature with particular reference to Owen and Sassoon. Owen is a tragic figure and his poems are really moving. Sassoon was such oddbod, he is endlessly fascinating. Have you read his Sheraton trilogy? 8mo
Anna40 @CarolynM I had never heard of either of them before reading this book. Would you recommend starting off with Sheraton trilogy? 8mo
CarolynM It‘s fictionalised autobiography so it‘s a good way to get to know him. The first volume, Memoirs of a Fox Hunting Man is pre war, the other 2 during the war and cover the Craiglockart experience. Sassoon also features in Robert Graves‘s memoir Goodbye to All That. 8mo
Anna40 @CarolynM thanks! Sounds great 💕 8mo
CarolynM And for a fictional take on Owen and Sassoon at Craiglockart 8mo
35 likes3 stack adds10 comments
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dabbe
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TheSpineView 🤩🤩🤩 9mo
dabbe @TheSpineView 🩶🖤🩶 9mo
43 likes2 comments
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Liz_M
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This was a two month read, began during my July vacation and finished in August. Written in three sections, some was more interesting than others, but overall an engrossing read. #1001Books

#12booksof2024 @andrew65

Andrew65 Sounds interesting. 9mo
BarbaraBB Loved this one 9mo
kspenmoll Wonderful book! 9mo
CarolynM Broke my heart as an 18 year old. I still find myself reciting Roland‘s poems sometimes. 9mo
27 likes4 comments