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A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945
 
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A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945 [Hardcover]

Vasily Grossman , Antony Beevor , Luba Vinogradova


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To what extent does A Writer at War present the “ruthless truth of war”? Assembled by editors Antony Beevor (Stalingrad and Berlin: The Downfall 1945) and Luba Vinogradova from a collection of hitherto unpublished notes taken by Soviet journalist/ novelist Vasily Grossman during his time with the Red Army from 1941 to 1945, A Writer at War provides a rare insider’s look into the private life and psyche of the author, as well as the war’s soldiers, civilians, and victims.
Born in 1905 in Berdichev, Ukraine, to a middle-class, educated Jewish family, Iosif Solomonovich Grossman received the Russified Vasily from his Russian caregiver. Shortly after the revolution, a thirteen-year-old Grossman returned home from Switzerland-where he had lived for two years with his mother-to a permanently transformed Berdichev, scarred first by the German conquest, and soon afterwards by the civil war between the Red and White armies battling for control of the country. It was during this time that the young Grossman saw for himself the dichotomous nature of the revolution. This period of his life-during which the spectre of random death was visited upon friends and enemies alike, and with anti-Semitic pogroms destroying approximately one-third of the Jewish population in Ukraine-was to resonate with his experiences, many years later, in the Second World War.
After graduating from Moscow University with a degree in chemistry, Grossman found work as an engineer, but by the early 1930s he decided to devote himself full-time to his real passion: writing. In April 1934, Grossman published the acclaimed short story In the Town of Berdichev (a tale set during the civil war in which a pregnant female political commissar finds refuge with a poor Jewish family), proving that for him, the pivotal, violent period in the early decades of the 20th century, in addition to the theme of anti-Semitism, would continue to haunt the writer and provide him with inspiration for his later work.
Germany invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, and without hesitation, Grossman rushed to volunteer to fight. However, at thirty-five years of age and physically unsuitable for combat, this “completely civilian person,” as his daughter Ekaterina Korotkova-Grossman recalled, was assigned instead to become a correspondent for the Red Army newspaper, Krasnaya Zvezda or Red Star. Grossman’s notes begin on August 5, 1941. His insistence-sometimes against the wishes of his superiors-that he be at the front and mingling with the fighting troops eventually took him to all the key events on the Eastern Front. He was with the Red Army during its disastrous first few weeks; he was at Kursk, describing the world’s largest tank battle; he lived the grind-it-out fighting in Stalingrad; he saw the death factory that was Treblinka; he witnessed the last, desperate gasps of the Nazi regime in Berlin. In total, Grossman would end up spending over one thousand days dodging bullets to detail the fighting and record the enormous, wrenching human costs of the war.
Rarely do Beevor and Vinogradova venture as far as to opine about Grossman’s observations; instead, their narrative serves to contextualise the journalist’s notes and situate them chronologically. The two editors rightly keep their narrative frame to the background, so that the dominant voice effectively remains that of the writer at war. Anything more intrusive would be an affront to Grossman’s potent prose, which he wields with a novelist’s descriptive powers. In his seminal essay, “The Hell Called Treblinka” (later used at Nuremberg during the trial of several prominent Nazis charged after the war with crimes against humanity), he wrote of the final moments leading up to the gas chamber:

“Naked people were led to the cash office and asked to submit their documents and valuables . . . documents, which no one on earth any longer needed, were thrown on the ground-these were the documents of naked people who would be lying in the earth an hour later. But gold and valuables were subject to a careful sorting. . . And an amazing thing was that the swine utilized everything, even paper and fabric-anything which could be useful to anyone, was important and useful to these swine. Only the most precious thing in the world, a human life, was trampled by their boots.”

Even from the very beginning, Grossman distinguished himself with his uncompromising honesty; he made sure to note what he saw and felt accurately, and most importantly, he strove to write without prejudice. In the words of fellow Krasnaya Zvezda correspondent Ilya Ehrenberg, Grossman “was a true internationalist and reproached me frequently for saying ‘Germans’ instead of ‘Hitler’s men’ when describing the atrocities of the occupiers.” In “The Hell Called Treblinka”, Grossman lays out the responsibilities of the writer and his reader: “It is the writer’s duty to tell this terrible truth, and it is the civilian duty of the reader to learn it.”
His work, as highly respected as it was, was tightly vetted, and some of his articles dealing with subjects considered defeatist or taboo within the Soviet Union-such as desertion or collaboration with the enemy, and the categorical massacre of Jews-were either censored or never published. Even work that did not necessarily clash with the party line was edited, as was standard practice, to become more ‘politically correct’. In a letter addressed to his second wife, Olga Mikhailovna, on December 5, 1942, during the particularly vicious winter fighting at Stalingrad, Grossman complained that “the editorial office has adopted a rule of cutting off the end of any essay, replacing dots with comas, crossing out the descriptions that I particularly like, changing titles and inserting phrases like: ‘This faith and love virtually made miracles.’” Such editing should not have surprised Grossman, as every issue of the widely read Krasnaya Zveda was read page by page, line by line, by none other than Joseph Stalin himself, before being sent to the presses.
Despite the aforementioned tinkering, Grossman’s writing never lost its intended effect of providing clarity, veracity, and education for his readership about the brutalising effects of war on both friend and foe. It was not his objective to glorify the bloody struggle-however just and necessary it was to crush Hitler’s murderous regime-but to show readers how humanity and civilisation had been stripped from soldiers and civilians alike in these murderous years.

“Finally, after a successful attack on a German column, the fighters returned and landed. The lead aircraft had human flesh stuck in the radiator . . . Poppe, the leader, is picking the meat out with a file. They summon a doctor who examines the bloody mass attentively and pronounces [it] ‘Aryan meat!’ Everyone laughs. Yes, a pitiless time-a time of iron-has come!”

Grossman refused to act as an organ for Stalin’s propaganda machine in any way. He noted down the lawlessness of the Red Army-which he once admired for its tenacity and resiliency in the first desperate days of the war-on German territory: atrocities ranged from the gang raping of young girls to looting to arson. His writing was microcosmic in scope, reflecting the shock of discovering that many Ukrainian villages had voluntarily helped the Germans round up Jews for mass execution, say, or recording the reply of a divisional commander to his second-in-command wanting additional directions on the use of flares (“I shit on your flares. Sit down and have dinner with me”). It was this, as opposed to the dispassionate and more encompassing reports of army group movements, tank thrusts, or division-level counterattacks, that has made his writing so enduring.
However much death and destruction he was witness to in his lifetime, Grossman never lost the ability to be touched by anguish, grief, or sorrow; the war had not succeeded in dehumanising him the way it had so many of his subjects. In a letter to Olga in late 1942, on hearing of the death of her son, Misha (one of two sons from her previous marriage), he awkwardly wrote, “Don’t give way to despair. There is so much sorrow around us . . . [Others] work, they look forward to victory, they don’t lose their spirits. And in what hard conditions they had to survive!” This clumsiness, an inability to adequately express himself in words-something he never had to contend with when writing about others-at this private moment of familial loss showed his other side, that side of him that had been there all along: not the famous journalist or novelist, but like many others, a man caught up in a miserable war he didn’t want.
Richmond Wong (Books in Canada)

From Publishers Weekly

Soviet author Grossman volunteered for the army when the Germans invaded in 1941 and spent more than three years as a special correspondent at the front for the army newspaper Red Star. His wartime writing established him as a major "voice" of war—a status resembling in many ways that of Ernie Pyle in America. This volume, a perfect complement to the panoramic vision of Ivan's War, collects excerpts from Grossman's notebooks and published dispatches, few of them longer than a couple of paragraphs. And while the dispatches usually describe scenes fitting with Soviet orthodoxy, Grossman's notebooks also record the bloody-mindedness, the despair and the disaffection that permeated Soviet ranks as the Red Army paid its dues of learning how to fight a modern war. That material, of course, was not published at the time. Grossman was a perceptive observer with an eye for essential detail. His vignettes of the fighting at Kursk and the battles that brought the Red Army into Berlin are models of combat reporting, and the elegiac realism of his description of Treblinka merits wide anthologizing in Holocaust literature. This volume stands among the finest eyewitness accounts of Soviet Russia's war on the Eastern Front. (Jan. 10)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Amazon.com: 4.7 out of 5 stars (40 customer reviews)

84 of 86 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "I kneel behind the soldier's trench, Feb 7 2006
By Leonard Fleisig "Len" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945 (Hardcover)
I walk mid shamble smear and stench, The dead I mourn." John Finley.

The Soviet journalist and author Vasily Grossman did more than kneel behind the soldier's trench. He lived with the Red Army from the catastrophic summer of 1941, through the defense of Moscow, the apocalyptic carnage of Stalingrad, the hard-won liberation of Soviet territory, the horrible discoveries of Nazi genocide in Madjanek and Treblinka, and the final bloody, triumphant march into Berlin. Anthony Beevor and Luba Vinogradova's "A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945" is a marvelous examination of both "Grossman's war" and the war itself.

Vasily Grossman is something of a forgotten, unsung giant of Soviet literature. Born in Berdichev, Ukraine in 1905, Grossman rose to prominence and received national acclaim as a war reporter for Red Star, the official newspaper of the Red Army. Although never a member of the Communist Party, Grossman was, for most of his life, a strong supporter of the Soviet Union. Grossman's reporting was realistic (despite editing by Party censors) and was enormously popular among both high ranking officers and foot soldiers. After the war, Grossman returned to writing. His magnum opus, Life and Fate was not published in the USSR until 1988. When it was originally submitted for publication the Soviet authorities `arrested' the book and told Grossman that it would not be published for 200 years. Fortunately, a copy of the manuscript survived, was smuggled to Switzerland and published in Europe in 1980, fifteen years after Grossman's death. Life and Fate was based, in good part, on Grossman's wartime experiences. Consequently, Beevor's work provides both an historical, ground-level examination of the war generally and a great deal of insight into the life experiences that formed the moral foundation of Grossman's novels.

Beevor (and his translator and collaborator Vinogradova) have taken Grossman's notebooks, war diaries, personal correspondence and his Red Star articles and set them out as part of their narrative. The transition from Grossman's text to the commentary is well thought out and seamless. Beevor is no stranger to the Eastern Front, (he has written two well received books"Stalingrad" and "The Fall of Berlin") and he does an excellent job of putting Grossman's writings into the context of his times.

Grossman is swept into the war as a reporter for Red Star immediately after the German invasion in June, 1941. Grossman's writing (and Beevor's commentary) takes us through that first disastrous summer of defeat, despair, death, and retreat. The magnificent and bloody defense of Stalingrad follows and the success of Operation Uranus in November, 1942 that resulted in the encirclement and destruction of General Paulus' Sixth Army follows. The next portion of the book has Grossman writing about the Red Army on the offensive, from the Battle of Kursk through the liberation of the Ukraine and then Poland. It is here that Grossman first learns of the horror that was the holocaust.

Grossman's reports from Treblinka were the first, first-hand accounts of the Nazi death camps and what Grossman saw changed his life. Although Jewish, Grossman had always considered himself a secular citizen of the USSR. The death camps and the murder of his mother at the hands of Nazis and Ukrainian collaborators reawakened his sense of a Jewish identity even though he remained totally secular. Grossman's experience of the camps and the evidence he saw there of man's innate inhumanity to man stunned him even after almost 4 years of living with brutality on an unfathomable scale. In ending one of his reports Grossman writes: "It is infinitely hard even to read this. The reader must believe me, it is as hard to write it. Someone might ask: "Why write about all this, why remember all that?" It is the writer's duty to tell this terrible truth, and it is the civilian duty of the reader to learn it."

It is clear from reading A Writer at War and two of Grossman's novels, "Life and Fate" and "Forever Flowing" that Grossman took his duty to tell his terrible truth seriously. Beevor has done Grossman a good service by letting Grossman's voice be heard again. I hope this book creates renewed interest in Grossman's life and writing.

49 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing stories, Feb 11 2006
By T. Kunikov - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Writer at War : Vasily Grossman with the Red Army, 1941-1945 (Hardcover)
What I loved about this book is that Grossman wrote both about the good and the bad. He could admit about the Red Army having 'cowards' in its ranks and about the executions that followed. But at the same time you can read about a soldier who was sentenced to be executed, the executioners gun misfired, the soldier ran away and was hidden by a commissar for days. Eventually after many inquiries and the fact that the soldier came back on his own accord his death sentence was rescinded and he followed the commissar around all the time, when asked why he replied "I am afraid that the Germans may kill you, Comrade Commissar. I am guarding you."
Another recollection is about a soldier who accidentally shot another Red Army man, he was so sick with grief that he eventually killed himself. The retreats of 1941 are covered in some detail as Grossman was right there on the front, a few times even narrowly avoiding the encirclements themselves. He ate with the troops, slept with them, wrote letters with them, and interviewed them again and again. From pilots, to artillery and mortar men, to tank troops and nurses. Stories of how girls went into battle outside of Stalingrad and throughout the war, how they died just as quickly and easily as any man and how they fought just as proudly and courageously risking their lives to bandage the wounded and evacuate them from the battlefield.
Stalingrad of course consumes a large portion of the book as this was Grossman's forte, he was there for a large part of the siege and the stories from this city are captivating to say the least. Snipers were quite popular and he interviewed many of them finding out how they came to be snipers and how they did their jobs so well.
Lastly is the liberation of territory from the Germans and Romanians and of course the war being taken to Germany. He holds nothing back while describing the destruction the German Army reigned over his land and eventually discovering that his mother was among the victims of an execution of the entire Jewish population of his him town. When Treblinka is discovered the reader is presented with a large article about it, some of the stories recounted are heartbreaking and at the same time he shows how many times Jews rebelled and fought back, on dozens of occasions. Covered are the rapes and robberies of Germans and Germany as a whole, Grossman holds nothing back and talks about the screaming of women and their bruised and swollen bodies and faces when he encounters them sobbing and asking for help. One incident stayed in my memory, a Jewish officer was billeted in a house that used to belong to a Gestapo man who had run away. His family, a mother and her girls, begged this man to stay and protect them, this Jewish Red Army officer who had his entire family killed by the Germans. If one wants to understand with what stride these Red Army men fought and died, how easily the line was crossed between life and death and how they eventually triumphed, this book will answer many of your questions.

23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Essential Book for Students of WWII, Feb 3 2006
By S. Parry - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Writer at War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945 (Hardcover)
I have done a fair amount of reading on the "Russian War" and have read Grossman's "Life and "Fate." Of all these books "A Writer at War" stands out. Anthony Beevor has done a fine job of creating the narrative, filling in the gaps and explaining the situation the Russian Army and Vasily Grossman found from 1941 to 1945.

This book brings the overall arc of the war, the great battles and the agony of officers, soldiers and civilians into full view. Most memorable are his up close descriptions of Stalingad and his searching interviews in his Ukranian hometown where his mother was executed along with twenty thousand Jews. His description of the heroism of young women at Stalingard is extremely moving. The section on the Treblinka concentration camp, where nearly a million people were exterminated, was used at the Nurenberg Trials and has an immediacy that is profoundly affecting even after all these years and all we know about the Holocaust.

I cannot recommend this book too highly, particularly in conjunction with "Life and Fate" and other histories of the Russian-German cataclysm.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 40 reviews  4.7 out of 5 stars 

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