Subtitle: Stories and Poems of the Korean War
Edited by: W. D. Ehrhart and Philip K. Jason
Subject: Literature/Korean War
Paperback ISBN 0-8135-2639-6
Pages: 300 pp., 2 maps
Description: A collection of short stories and poems to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of the Korean War, this anthology samples the war's rich literary legacy.
"Retrieving Bones performs a great service in linking the Korean War to World War II and Vietnam, helping Americans see themselves more clearly as consequential actors in one of the most ambiguous, and, if ever let fully out in the open, one of the grandest and most complex dramas of our century."-Chicago Tribune
"A book long overdue. . . . These stories are replete with napalm strikes and medevacs which many people mistake as distinctive features of Vietnam. But while most of the stories grope tentatively toward the nihilism of Vietnam, the poems in this collection come at us like lava."-San Francisco Examiner & Chronicle
"The Korean War is also absent from literary history. . . . This is a situation that Retrieving Bones sets out to redress, and it does so successfully. There are some wonderful stories here-about contact across cultural barriers and the anguish suffered by men fighting for pointless possession of a single hill. The poems are the real revelation, though."-The Times Literary
"Responsibly selected and authoritatively introduced, this collection is a worthy reminder of the facts and costs of an almost-forgotten war." -Paul Fussell, author of Wartime: Understanding and Behavior in the Second World War
"It is the rare anthology which achieves both literary and historical significance. Retrieving Bones is a superb collection of short fiction and poems that forcibly reminds us that the United States did not go directly from the 'good' World War II to Vietnam. In between there was Korea, and Jason and Ehrhart demonstrate why it is so important that we remember and understand it." -Marilyn B. Young, author of The Vietnam Wars, 1945-1990
The Korean War was a major event in American history. It marked an abrupt end to the euphoria Americans felt in the wake of victory in World War II and turned out to be the harbinger of disaster in Vietnam a decade later.
Though three years of brutal fighting resulted in millions of casualties, the final truce line of 1953 corresponded almost exactly to the positions the opponents held when the fighting began. Back home, the returning veterans met with little interest in or appreciation of what they had endured. Consequently, literary responses to the Korean War did not find an eager readership. Few people, it seemed, wanted to read about what they perceived as a backwater war that possessed neither grand scale nor apparent nobility, a war that ended not with a bang, but a whimper.
Yet an important literature has come out of the Korean War. As we mark the fiftieth anniversary of the war, these writings are well worth our attention. Many of the twelve stories and fifty poems assembled in Retrieving Bones have long been out of print and are almost impossible to find in any other source. The editors have enhanced this collection by providing maps, a chronology of the Korean War, and annotated lists of novels, works of nonfiction, and films. In a detailed introduction, Ehrhart and Jason discuss the milestones of the Korean War and place each fiction writer and poet represented into historical and literary contexts.
Among the writers and poets are
· James Lee Burke
· Eugene Burdick
· William Chamberlain
· Rolando Hinojosa
· Reg Saner
· Vern Sneider
· Stanford Whitmore
· Keith Wilson
W. D. Ehrhart, a poet and anthologist of the Vietnam War, is currently a research fellow of the University of Wales in Swansea.
Philip K. Jason teaches English at the U.S. Naval Academy and has written several books and essays on Vietnam War literature.