This important book is not about nations or ideologies. It is not about what side was right or wrong in WWII. It is about regular men in the throes of war, fighting for their families, their comrades, and for their very lives. Das Boot does not glorify war. On the contrary, it highlights the fact that we are all human and are all basically the same on the level of the individual. It illustrates that one of the horrors of war rarely mentioned is that the outcome is often decided by brute force, regardless of right, wrong, or ideology. The individual is caught in the middle, merely doing his best for what he believes is right.
Das Boot follows one German submarine on one patrol in the north Atlantic during WWII when the war is beginning to turn. We live in close quarters for weeks with the fictional crew of U-96, a Type VIIC-class U-boat. We feel the stifling claustrophobia of a WWII era submarine, the boredom of fruitless searches for the enemy, the tedium and fright of a month-long Atlantic hurricane, the thrill of the hunt, and the abject terror of the hunter becoming the hunted.
The intensity of Das Boot is something I have rarely experienced in a book. I found myself reading late into the night, huddled with the silent crew at impossible depths, listening to the creaking, the dripping condensation and the popping rivets of U-96 while awaiting the next depth charge attack. You can feel the sweat, you can taste the salt, and you can feel the shattering explosions rocking the control room.
75% of German submariners during WWII died on patrol, which makes Das Boot one of the very few surviving accounts of what that brutal life was like. Lothar-Günther Buchheim spent time on German subs during the war as a correspondent, and this fictionalized testament is a very valuable document of life "on the other side." In the U.S. most WWII accounts paint German fighting men with a very broad brush. Buchheim takes on a very controversial and difficult task by humanizing them. There are no heroes or false bravado here. The crew has a Christmas tree on board. They talk about their families, their sweethearts and their childhoods. They get their hands dirty and yearn to see the sky once again.
It may be true that victors write the histories, but it is important to remember that real people serve on both sides in any war. Highly recommended.