Unconditional Surrender: The Conclusion Of Men At Arms And Officers And Gentlemen
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Edition: 1st ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
Condition remarks: Boards - good. Binding - tight.
The final volume of Evelyn Waugh's celebrated Sword of Honour trilogy, Unconditional Surrender chronicles the closing wartime odyssey of Guy Crouchback, a disillusioned English Catholic officer navigating the moral and spiritual wreckage of the Second World War's final years. With biting satirical wit and profound melancholy, Waugh presents a world in which idealism has been thoroughly defeated — not by the enemy, but by the grinding machinery of military bureaucracy, political compromise, and human folly. Guy's journey takes him from London to Yugoslavia, where he witnesses the tragic fate of Jewish refugees and confronts the uncomfortable reality that the Allied victory belongs as much to Soviet opportunism as to any noble cause. Waugh argues, with characteristic acerbity, that the war's conclusion represents not a triumph of civilization but a surrender of the very values for which decent men believed they were fighting. Rich in dark comedy and suffused with a deeply Catholic sense of sin and redemption, this masterful conclusion stands as one of the twentieth century's most honest and unsparing portraits of war, duty, and the limits of human honor.
Author: Evelyn Waugh
Format: Hardback
Published: 1961, Chapman & Hall
Genre: WW2
Edition: 1st ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
Condition remarks: Boards - good. Binding - tight.
The final volume of Evelyn Waugh's celebrated Sword of Honour trilogy, Unconditional Surrender chronicles the closing wartime odyssey of Guy Crouchback, a disillusioned English Catholic officer navigating the moral and spiritual wreckage of the Second World War's final years. With biting satirical wit and profound melancholy, Waugh presents a world in which idealism has been thoroughly defeated — not by the enemy, but by the grinding machinery of military bureaucracy, political compromise, and human folly. Guy's journey takes him from London to Yugoslavia, where he witnesses the tragic fate of Jewish refugees and confronts the uncomfortable reality that the Allied victory belongs as much to Soviet opportunism as to any noble cause. Waugh argues, with characteristic acerbity, that the war's conclusion represents not a triumph of civilization but a surrender of the very values for which decent men believed they were fighting. Rich in dark comedy and suffused with a deeply Catholic sense of sin and redemption, this masterful conclusion stands as one of the twentieth century's most honest and unsparing portraits of war, duty, and the limits of human honor.