You know how you read and read a long book thinking you’ll never get through it and then when you finally get to the end, you miss it? That’s how this book was for me. It’s tough reading, densely written, with sections in French and more characters than anyone could keep tract of without a spreadsheet, but the writing is so rich, the stories so startlingly real that I persisted. Dos Passos seems to me ahead of his time. The action in this book takes place mostly between 1910 and 1920. While the characters are dealing with WWI, communism, women’s suffrage, and prohibition, they also get into child abuse, abortion, venereal disease, racism and other issues one might not expect to read in a book from this era. Those who have studied Dos Passos’ work say this is one of his more conservative novels. It’s difficult to describe the plot. The two main stories center on Jay Pignatelli, who grew up mostly in Europe and goes back there as an ambulance driver during the war, and Lulie Harrington, an orphan who chooses career over marriage. There are many other threads, some going back to before the Civil War. More than a single story, Dos Passos captures a group of young people seeking their place in the world in a country that is trying to do the same. It’s a heavy book, but worth the effort.