Trumbo, Dalton. Johnny Got His Gun. Narrated by William Dufris. Tantor Media, 2008.
Trumbo, Dalton. Johnny Got His Gun. Bantam Books, 1970.
Reason read: Armistice Day is celebrated on November 11th. Read in honor of that day.
I hope you read the copy of Johnny Got His Gun with the foreword by a mother, Cindy Sheehan, who lost her son to war. Her anger is palpable in every sentence she wrote. Her foreword throbs with an abundance of seething words. She ends with the largest question in the human lexicon – why?
Joe. What a brilliant name for a character. Just your average Joe. Joe is every man. Joe is the average man. Joe is your son. Your brother. Your father or uncle. Your husband or boyfriend. Joe could be your world. Told in flashbacks of better days, Joe was your typical teenager before World War I; he grew up with a good friend, he liked to go fishing, he had good parents, he had a best girl. Then everything changed when adulthood set in. Joe lost his best girl to his best friend. Later he left behind a perfect girl when he shipped off to fight the good fight in World War I. Did want to fight? Maybe. Did he want to become a “piece of meat” with no arms, legs, eyes, ears, or tongue? Unable to move anything but his head, unable to see, hear, or speak? Most definitely not. Joe’s incremental realization of the loss of his limbs, sight, hearing, sense of smell was terrible. Even when he wants someone to end his life he cannot get relief. As an audio book it was even more devastatingly painful to hear. I do not think I would have been able to finish it if I had to read it only in print.
Confessional: I was upset when critics would call Joe “a hunk of meat” until I learned that’s what he thought about himself. He said it first.
Author fact: While not officially banned many schools found it too disturbing to have on their shelves. Trumbo did not mind the threat of banning Johnny Got His Gun. He and his publishers decided to delay a reprinting during World War II.
Book trivia: Johnny Got His Gun won a National Book Award. Metallica used clips from the movie based on the book in one of their songs.
Audio trivia: Read by William Dufris, the narration was amazing.
Music: “After the Ball is Over.”
BookLust Twist: from Book Lust in the chapter “Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror” (p 213). At first I thought Johnny Got His Gun would be in the fiction section of the World War I chapter, but horror is the perfect place for this book.