Naked and the Dead

Mailer, Norman. Naked and the Dead. Signet Book, 1948.

Reason read: Germany surrendered on May 8th 1945. Read in honor of that historic day.

Meet General Cumming, arrogant and blundering. Gallagher is only twenty years old with a pregnant wife back home. Look out for Sergeant Croft because he is mean. Red grew up in a mining town. The idea that any man, from any walk of life, can experience the horror of war as equals.
Norman Mailer takes you inside the mind of a solider. The long nights in a foxhole keeping watch and the raging thoughts that go through a soldier’s head: paranoid about the enemy’s location, wondering about his girl back home. The twisted sense of right and wrong: a soldier can be devastated after the torture and killing of an insect, but feel nothing for doing the same to his Japanese enemy. Writing letters back home: being diplomatic about what a soldier could or could not say. Even though they were not sure what they were fighting for, a soldier could not admit that to his family. By stepping back in time before each character became a soldier was a way for Mailer to humanize his characters even further. Some escaped fatherhood by enlisting. Others needed to prove their toughness for fear of seeming too sensitive and weak as little boys.
Mailer’s attention to detail brings his reader right into the jungle fighting. The way water seeps into greased “waterproof” shoes. The way a forty pound pack gets heavier with the weight of water. What they carried and how they carried it. Obviously, Mailer speaks with experience. Heartbreakingly so.

Quotes to quote, “Dalleson was no problem; he even had potentialities for being a good man” (p 65), “In the war you keep on moving” (p 202).

Music: “Pennies From Heaven,” Tchaikovsky, “Show Me the Way to Go Home,” “I Love a Parade, the Beat of a Drum,” “I’ll Be Glad When You’re Dead, You Rascal,” “My Country ‘Tis of Thee,” and “Roll Me Over.”

BookLust Twist: from Book Lust in the chapter called “World War II Fiction” (p 252). Also, from More Book Lust in the chapter called “You Can’t Judge a Book by Its Cover” (p 237).