This impressive coming-of-age novel, published in 1941, has the unusual setting of a German-American small town during the First World War. The small town called Parkerton is based on the the the Illinois town of Pana, where the author grew up. The central character, Bill, is the teenaged son of a Dresden-born mother, who teaches music to the children of the town's leading families, and an absent Welsh father. Bill has no sympathy for his uncle's blinkered pro-German patriotism and longs for the day when he can escape small-town life and join the army.
The author, Vincent Sheean (born 5 December 1899), was brought up in Illinois. He went to the University of Chicago and interrupted his studies in 1918 to join the army with a view to serving in Europe. He was disappointed when the armistice came: “I was sorry when the war ended... There were
millions of us, young Americans between the ages of 15 or 16
and 18 or 19, who cursed freely all through the middle weeks
of November. We felt cheated. We had been put into uniform with the
definite promise that we were to be trained as officers and sent to
France.” He returned to university in March 1919. On the death of his mother the following year, he moved to New York to start a career in journalism. In 1922 he moved to France to work for the Chicago Tribune, travelling widely as one of its foreign correspondents. In addition to his reporting, he wrote works of fiction, biography and memoir. He wrote a young autobiography called Personal History as he observed the rise of fascism in Europe. It was later adapted into an Alfred Hitchcock film.
There is a rising conflict for Bill Owen, the central character, between his German parentage and his American upbringing. His mother, Louisa, "was filled with foreboding; the year was 1916 and two of her brothers and no fewer than seven nephews were in Germany; she had produced an alien son in a strange land, and although the land was also hers... the growth of her son was setting her apart from it...”
Bill talks about his mother's native country as a detached foreigner:
“The Germans are killing Americans all the time, sinking our ships, insulting us every day, and that Wilson does nothing at all about it except send notes and notes and notes.”
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