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WWI made relevant in the retelling

BOOK REVIEW

July 04, 2006|Anthony Day, Special to The Times

Unknown Soldiers

The Story of the Missing of the First World War


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Neil Hanson

Alfred A. Knopf: 476 pp., $28.95

*

A World Undone

The Story of the Great War, 1914 to 1918

G.J. Meyer

Delacorte Press: 670 pp., $28

*

AS stealthy and sure as the dust that permeated the Manhattan air from the pulverization of the World Trade Center in 2001, as lasting in human affairs as the radiation from Hiroshima, the telltale trails of the Great War -- World War I -- still haunt the consciousness of modern man.

The enormous size of the great blow that European civilization dealt to itself was not at first apparent to everyone, so annihilating was the explosion. It took years before the surviving world more fully integrated into its basic understanding of reality the terrible lessons of those unspeakable four years.

Men and women had to write books about it, create paintings of it, address it with various forms of art until it could come slowly and haltingly into view. New empires, their bases shaken, had to rise -- and fall. And the reaction -- appalled, barely comprehending -- to the millions of harmless and ordinary people who were consumed in that war, as in a field of grass on fire, became part of the common contemporary experience before the full extent of this vast and malevolent disaster could be felt.

The Great War has been better understood on the other side of the ocean than here. Without the United States it perhaps could not have ended as it did, but the United States was essentially at the edge of it. It would take one more world catastrophe to pull America to the center of events.

As it turned out, Americans probably know less, and most likely feel less deeply, than Europeans about the bloody explosion that blew the old order apart.

Two new books published 88 years after the armistice can help redress that imbalance. Each in its own way seems especially suited for the interested American reader.

"Unknown Soldiers" by Neil Hanson takes a merciless look at the unthinkable conditions of the static trench war in Northern France and Belgium, which gave a new, bottomless and hollow tone to the ancient phrase "human folly."

"A World Undone" by G.J. Meyer is a skillful guide for readers, like many Americans, who are not steeped in the broad sweep or intricate details of the storm of fire. Neither author is an academic historian, but Meyer writes clearly and comprehensively about the complex four-year period as does Hanson on his share of it.

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