The first war novel by the author of Life and Fate and a stunningly
accurate portrayal of soldierly life written at the beginning of World
War II.
Vasily Grossman wrote three novels about the Second World War, each
offering a distinct take on what a war novel can be, and each
extraordinary. A common set of characters links Stalingrad and Life
and Fate, but Stalingrad is not only a moving and exciting story of
desperate defense and the turning tide of war, but also a monumental
memorial for the countless war dead. Life and Fate, by contrast, is a
work of moral and political philosophy as well as a novel, and the deep
question it explores is whether or not it is possible to behave
ethically in the face of overwhelming violence. The People Immortal is
something else entirely. Set during the catastrophic first months of the
German invasion of the Soviet Union, this is the tale of an army
battalion dispatched to slow the advancing enemy at any cost, with
encirclement and annihilation its promised end. A rousing story of
resistance, The People Immortal is the novel as weapon in hand.