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The Young Lions

A staggering classic of World War II that the New York Times called "the best war novel yet written by an American"

In the immediate aftermath of World War II, countless American writers attempted to use fiction to convey the complicated experience they'd just undergone. Few of the novels that emerged from that period were as ambitious and powerful as The Young Lions, a sweeping, dramatic account of war from the point of view of ordinary solders that depicts the danger, excitement, trauma, and loss of a no-holds-barred global war. 
When Irwin Shaw published The Young Lions, he was known solely as a writer of short stories, and his panoramic, detailed, unforgettable account of the war was met with nothing short of awe. Shaw tells his story from the points of view of a perceptive young Nazi, a jaded American film producer, and a shy Jewish boy just married to the love of his life. Together they enable us to see, decades lateer, as no other novelist has since, the scope, confusion, and complexity of war.

This is a landmark novel that Washington Post critic Jonathan Yardley ranked with wartime classics like From Here to EternityThe Naked and the Dead, and The Caine Mutiny. As James Salter writes in his foreword, "The Second World War was the central event of Shaw’s generation. The writers who stand in some glory about its forgotten battlefields and whose novels came from firsthand knowledge—Mailer, heller, James Jones, Michener—include, indomitable in their midst. Irwin Shaw. He need not to have bowed to any of them then, or, if he were still alive, now."

696 pages | 5-1/2 x 8-1/2 | © 2000

Fiction

Reviews

"The best war novel yet written by an American. . . . Mr. Shaw is a natural writer. He is an acute observer of men at war. His ear for dialogue is excellent. He gives his major characters an immediate reality that is utterly persuasive."

Orville Prescott | New York Times

"Reading [The Young Lions] is a true emotional experience—and one that is likely to leave the reader with a deeper understanding of the present world. Perhaps . . . no novel can be asked to accomplish more than that.”

Mark Brandel | New York Times Book Review

"It is almost as if a DiMaggio had cast aside his center fielder’s glove one afternoon, turned up that night at Madison Square
Garden, and knocked out Joe Louis in the first round. Irwin Shaw’s novel is that impressive.”
 

Richard Match | New York Herald Tribune

“[Shaw] writes with passion and tremendous punch, and drives the action forward with unfailing inventiveness.”
 

Charles J. Rolo | Atlantic

"This is the outstanding novel to have come out of the war, in the universality of its framework, its thoughtfulness, and its writing which is swift, believable and often brilliant."

Kirkus Reviews

One of the 1000 novels everyone should read

Guardian

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