 
			   
			  
					  Author:
Format: Quality Paperback
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Published: Nov 2016
Genre: Fiction - War & Military
Retail Price: $16.95
Pages: 296
An NYRB Classics Original
Seventeen-year-old Schlump marches off  to war in 1915 because going to war is the best way to meet girls. And  so he does, on his first posting, overseeing three villages in occupied  France. But then Schlump is sent to the front, and the good times end.
Schlump,  written by Hans Herbert Grimm, was published anonymously in 1928 and  was one of the first German novels to describe World War I in all its  horror and absurdity, and it remains one of the best. What really sets  it apart is its remarkable central character. Who is Schlump? A bit of a  rascal and a bit of a sweetheart, a victim of his times, an inveterate  survivor, maybe even a new type of man. At once comedy, documentary,  hellhole, and fairy tale, Schlump is a gripping and disturbing  book about the experience of trauma and what the great critic Walter  Benjamin, writing at the same time as Hans Herbert Grimm, would call the  death of experience, since perhaps if anything goes, nothing counts.