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All Quiet On The Western Front

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All Quiet on the Western Front: Book Review

Erich Maria Remarque, author of All Quiet on the Western Front, actually fought in WWI (Remarque 297). Because of this, he was able to write this book with accurate depictions of the war. He writes how being in combat can really take a toll on a person and affect them in a negative way. He also writes of the pain and suffering that the soldiers must cope with that comes along with living in constant fear and danger. When looking at the title of the book, and actually reading the material inside of the book, one would think that the title completely contradicts the book itself because of how it mentions all of the noise from the combat taking place. However, the author did manage to connect the title with some of the material in the book. However, this connection does not take place until the very last page of the book when the author describes the day of the death of the antagonist of the novel, Paul Baümer. Remarque writes “He fell in October 1918, on a day that was so quiet and still on the whole front, that the army report confined itself to a single sentence: All quiet on the Western Front” (Remarque 296). It is quite ironic that the antagonist, Paul, would die on a day that is very quiet, when most deaths in the novel occurred when it was very loud and noisy from the battling that was taking place against both sides of the war. Nevertheless, we do see that the author did relate the title to the book, even though it was on

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