Goodbye to all that / ROBERT GRAVES [Littérature, Langues et Religions]
Langue : anglais.Publication : London [etc.] : Penguin books, Cop 1957.Description : 1 volume de 359 pages : couverture illustrée en couleurs ; 18 cm.ISBN : 9780241951415.Collection: Penguin essentialsDewey : 821.912, 22Résumé : 'There has been a lot of fighting hereabouts. The trenches have made themselves rather than been made, and run inconsequently in and out of the big thirty-foot high stacks of bricks; it is most confusing. The parapet of a trench which we don't occupy is built up with ammunition boxes and corpses . . .' In one of the most honest and candid self-portraits ever committed to paper, Robert Graves tells the extraordinary story of his experiences as a young officer in the First World War. He describes life in the trenches in vivid, raw detail, how the dehumanizing horrors he witnessed left him shell-shocked. They were to haunt him for the rest of his life.Type de document | Site actuel | Cote | Statut | Notes | Date de retour prévue |
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Littérature, Langues et Religions | Bibliothèque Universitaire Mohamed Sekkat 3ème étage | 821.912 GRA (Parcourir l'étagère) | Disponible | New 2018 |
Survol Bibliothèque Universitaire Mohamed Sekkat Étagères , Localisation : 3ème étage Fermer le survol d'étagère
Pas d'image de couverture disponible | ||||||||
821 TEN Alfred, Lord Tennyson: Selected Poems | 821 ويت ديوان الضفاف الاخرى -اوراق العشب | 821.54 ميد الجزيرة العائمة | 821.912 GRA Goodbye to all that | 822 ALI The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, Purgatorio | 822 CHE Plays | 822 CRI Claire en affaires Probablement les Bahamas |
Publié pour la 1re fois par Jonathan Cape en 1929. Edition revue, avec un nouveau prologue et un nouvel épilogue, publiée par Cassel en 1957 et par Penguin books en 1960
'There has been a lot of fighting hereabouts. The trenches have made themselves rather than been made, and run inconsequently in and out of the big thirty-foot high stacks of bricks; it is most confusing. The parapet of a trench which we don't occupy is built up with ammunition boxes and corpses . . .' In one of the most honest and candid self-portraits ever committed to paper, Robert Graves tells the extraordinary story of his experiences as a young officer in the First World War. He describes life in the trenches in vivid, raw detail, how the dehumanizing horrors he witnessed left him shell-shocked. They were to haunt him for the rest of his life
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