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Book SummaryWINNER TAKE ALLC.W. SchulerThe novel begins in
Czechoslovakia on the day the shooting stopped in the European
Theater of Operations, May 8, 1945, and ends on August 8, two days
after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. The narrative
follows a U.S Army Infantry Battalion as it disengages from its
combat mission and moves back across the border into Germany. Along
the newly established Czech border the Battalion occupies an
administrative district approximating the area of an American
county where they are responsible for internal security within
their zone of operation. In addition the Battalion is required to
monitor the flood of refugees crossing the border as they attempt
to escape the Czech police and the Soviet army advancing from the
East. The former German forced labor camps in the area, whose
occupants are now officially designated
The author wrote this collection of short stories and poetry while
doing graduate studies at the University of Kansas at the Writer's
Workshop. The essays are adaptations of sermons given at the
Unitarian-Universalist Congregation in Naples, Florida. The title
story in this collection, "The Apotheosis of Walter Smith" concerns
the suicide of a middle aged married man with two children, working
as a manager of the branch office of a loan company ($800.00
dollars on your signature only). It takes place in a small town in
western Illinois near Chicago, where, one cold evening in February
he experiences a sudden moment of desperation and despair at the
way his life has evolved, with no hope for promotion in his work
and multiple family problems. He leaves on the train for Chicago
and finds himself on this windy night standing on a bridge
overlooking the Chicago River, where he is accosted by a burly
policeman who warns him to leave the bridge. And for the first time
in his life he refuses to obey this lawful authority. As he stands
there pin the bridge he reviews the whole dismal story of his life
from the time he married his wife to the present, like the scenes
from a video. He climbs up on the railing and contemplates the cold
swirling water and the accumulated debris from the streets of
Chicago. He remembers the days when he was a child. At a picnic
with his family his father shows him how to skip a flat stone over
the water of the lake. But when Walter tries, his stone immediately
sinks into the water. His father encourages him to try again, but
instead he runs crying to his mother. Walter recalls this event as
he stands on the rail of the bridge, and while the policeman's back
is turned, he is ambiguously either pushed by the wind or
deliberately jumps into the debris of the river and sinks like a
stone instead of skipping across the water on forever to the center
of the lake. Walter Smith inhabited no special hell...just our good
old day-to-day hell...a man's existential agony conditioned by his
circumstances but not determined by them; the universal nausea that
makes one's last gagging effort the retching up of one's self. As
observed by Albert Camus: "Man has reasons, myths, ideals,
miracles...all manner of means of accomplishing that fatal evasion
of reality and betraying life. But nature has consequences. She
always has the last word. If time frightens us, this is because it
works out the problem and the solution comes afterwards. During
every day of an un-illustrious life, time carries us. But a moment
always comes when we have to carry it. We live in the future:
tomorrow, later on. 'When you have made your way'. 'You will
understand when you are old enough.'
Set against the backgrou war novel, in the conventional sense, but
a character study of the principal characters and their reaction to
the stresses and temptations associated with the occupation of an
enemy country. Since power determines who gets to do what to whom,
as Lord Acton observed, "Power corrupts," so in the military, as
with all institutions, power is distributed proportionate to a
hierarchy from the highest to the lowest echelons. In the military
this is called The Chain of Command. This is a story of how the
situation developed in the three months the 1st Battalion of
Infantry was the occupying power in a little German town on the
Czech border, Waldmunchen.
Book Summary WINNER TAKE ALL C.W. Schuler The novel begins in
Czechoslovakia on the day the shooting stopped in the European
Theater of Operations, May 8, 1945, and ends on August 8, two days
after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. The narrative
follows a U.S Army Infantry Battalion as it disengages from its
combat mission and moves back across the border into Germany. Along
the newly established Czech border the Battalion occupies an
administrative district approximating the area of an American
county where they are responsible for internal security within
their zone of operation. In addition the Battalion is required to
monitor the flood of refugees crossing the border as they attempt
to escape the Czech police and the Soviet army advancing from the
East. The former German forced labor camps in the area, whose
occupants are now officially designated
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