A typical memoir of the UK generation in the First World War was one of the most painful autobiography in history. Robert Graves despised his class, his country, his military boss, and civilians who blindly brought the Holocaust into home security. His stupid and cruel portrait popular at England's elite school is as tough as the explanation of his fight. There is nothing like a horrible and meaningless death of Graves, a terrible encounter with a terrible corrupting body, and a ruthless and terrible confrontation with the army 's command. But this annoying book was always fascinating. Graves is an excellent storyteller, and obviously it can burn all his bridges at the age of 34 (his age was first announced in 1929). He expresses beautiful words in extremely clear words and tells the reader about this excitement. As a poet, historical novelist, and critic, Graves resembles British Hemingway in this work. Minimize his essay and avoid all editors. Level of war - a trafficker he despised. - Wendy Smith
Robert Graves' autobiography, telling farewell to everyone, 1929 when the writer is 34 years old. "This is my bitter holiday for England," he wrote in the preamble of the second edition of Revision 1957. The title also included the passage of old orders after the disaster of the First World War, the lack of so-called patriotism, atheism, feminism, socialism, interest in pacifism, traditional marriage changes, especially the expression of new literature It may point. They appeared, they live directly in the grave so they are treated in the workplace
In his autobiography, Robert Graves explained the dramatic and somewhat eerie memory of his time in the First World War, and bid farewell to everyone. If you do not participate in war, it is difficult to understand the terrible and dramatic event that happened. As with other stories, it is easy to imagine and understand what happens when there is evidence to support the story. By including letters, articles, newspaper clippings, Graves can give the reader a better understanding of his war experiences.
Your book is likened to Douthat's privilege, education and ruling class of Harvard, and the closure of Bloom's American heart, but it reminds me of Robert Graves's bitter autobiographical title, good-bye. Like Graves, if you like your historical comedy, you will get angry - your version of Graves' traumatic war is the day of admission to Yale University - and you will appear The whole old order. However, rather than being expelled to Majorca, it mimics the institution participating in the exile evangelistic trip of the country you are participating in. This is not only "political progress" but also a dramatic story that is too nervous, also anti-capitalism. . I pray for good luck; you have done a lot of fair criticism, I hope people listen to the good part
Like Nabokov, Robert Graves wrote his memoir as "young man" to say "say goodbye to everyone" and rewrote it in the past 30 years. Many British authors finished autobiography when they were relatively young. The extreme example was Henry Green, who believes he might have died in battle at the age of 33, and he began autobiography in the late 1950s when he wrote Pack My Bag (although he died at the age of 62) . I completed the first volume of "Little Learning" and explained his 21-year-old life.