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Hardcover
First published February 1, 1963
Most duties a war imposes on us, Sergeant Bachmann, are revolting, let’s face it, insane and yet the soldier who performs them has to be responsible. That’s the way it is, let’s face it.Bachmann has seen more than his share of violence, pushed to the limits of sanity after being the only survivor when his entire regiment was swallowed into a coffin of mud and blood within a matter of minutes in a bog beneath a sky of bullets, It is no wonder he detests nature, Lind opening the novel with a surrealistic depiction of the forests containing the lines ‘brown pustules that seemed to be made of earth, entrails that looked like roots.’ Entrails and gore surround him, every tree could hide his death-giving enemy. Bachmann searches for his ‘lost paradise’ in such hellish landscapes, wishing only for nature to be desecrated and incinerated, a smoldering landscape his vision of heaven.
That’s absurd. In a war nobody’s innocent. Or everybody. Innocence is an obsolete concept. Nowadays you’re either for one side or the other. Active or passive. Nobody’s innocent.Spoken by the villainous Halftan, a character who commits the most heinous of crimes—or at least convinces others to commit the crimes for him—Lind investigates the morality of wartime, a time when one must be called to action, right or wrong being decided later by the victors. Interestingly enough, Halftan, a self-proclaimed ‘evil-genius’, makes the most insightful points about humanity in the novel, though many of these are cold and removed yet still cutting and accurate. He is another character who survives at all cost, weighing bloodshed and cruelty as a necessary evil to keep living. However, one may survive, but can the actions of survival be digested by consciousness or God. Despite the darkness of the novel, morality manages to sing through.