Fifteen-year-old Weston Newcomb is fairly surprised when he
passes the early entrance exam into the university at Chapel Hill,
North Carolina, in May of 1943. But the escape from his home in
Loris is welcome. Skipping his senior year at a small town high
school, West is now somewhat at a disadvantage, both in youth and
in education at this large university.
In his first class, he encounters a strangely antagonistic
professor, a specialist in Thomas Wolfe, who complicates his life.
However, his classmates give him a much broader education. Each new
acquaintance seems to have lived a life startlingly different from
his own. Self-centered and solipsistic but hungry for skills to
serve others, West encounters a gamut of friendships as he
stumbles, fumbles, and struggles toward social and sexual
adulthood.
Counterpoint to his progress are the guns of World War II. Nazis
have invaded Poland, the Japanese have struck Pearl Harbor, and
atrocities engulf the planet. Only gradually does West perceive the
importance of the war. He integrates personal growth and a
discovery of authoritarianism at its worst. He experiences the dark
midnight of FDR's death and the bright noon of war's end. He finds
his chance for manhood in a world he must help to rebuild. West
learns that war is hell, but so is growing up.
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