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The Great
Wars Forgotten Front: A Soldiers Diary and a Sons
Reflections, Jan F. Triska, professor emeritus of political
science, Columbia University Press, 1998; $35 (history). |
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Nearly 3 million men were killed or wounded in the
conflict between Italy and Austria during World War I. Triska does not
dwell on numbers but crafts a soldiers tale that is alternately
picaresque and horror-filled. Using his fathers wartime diaries,
he constructs a third-person narrative that follows Triska senior from
1916, when he was drafted into an Austrian artillery regiment, through
battles against Italy and, ultimately, to his time as a prisoner of war
in 1918. His father kept a daily account of the carnage in the
trenches. They wept, wet their pants, cried for their
mothers, he wrote about the raw recruits during the battle of the
Piave in June 1918. When Triska concludes that the war had no
meaning other than as a brutal interruption in their lives, the
reader understands why. |
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