This section contains 619 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: “A Malicious Panorama,” in The Nation, Vol. 117, No. 3028, 1923, p. 66.
In the following review, Crawford calls Through the Wheat “a remarkable first novel” despite a disappointing ending.
War is a panorama of “grim comic imbecility” to the eyes of Mr. Boyd's character Hicks. Toplofty idealism is brought into the picture, only to be shattered by a barrage of deftest malice. A pompous captain, with a Napoleonic vision, or a zealous top sergeant, actuated by a crusading delusion, becomes helplessly ridiculous in the face of a platoon of unimpressed and “kidding” soldiers. The antithesis is given a more sharply ironic twist in the spectacle of men under fire becoming vocal in photographically trivial conversation about mail, food, and cigarettes. The popular sentimentalism of a bitter and personal hatred for the Germans is dismissed with a hilarious gesture:
Possibly for an hour during his whole life he [Hicks] had hated...
This section contains 619 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |