Milton Public Library

Bolsheviki, a dead serious comedy, David Fennario

Classification
1
Contributor
1
Content
1
Label
Bolsheviki, a dead serious comedy, David Fennario
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary form
fiction
Main title
Bolsheviki
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
David Fennario
Sub title
a dead serious comedy
Summary
Set in a hotel bar in Montreal on Remembrance Day, Bolsheviki has World War I veteran Harry {u0093}Rosie" Rollins telling young reporter Jerry Nines about his experience in the trenches. Rollins recalls men pissing their pants, losing limbs, and planning a revolt against their officers. The character of Rosie Rollins is based on World War I veteran Harry "Rosie" Rowbottom, who was wounded at Vimy Ridge. Fennario taped an interview with Rowbottom in 1979 in the old "King Eddy" Hotel in Toronto over a bottle of Bushmills whiskey. Rosie's meandering monologue delivers a blistering de-glorification of war as it shifts back and forth between his wartime recollections and the present. The veteran's clattering, fast-paced description of life and death on the Western Front reproduces the chaotic sounds and rhythm of battle. This cutting-edge drama, profoundly in opposition to conventional histories of Canadian troops in World War I, debunks every sentimental notion of duty, heroism, and nationhood. "Birth of Nation" they called it on TV but I didn't see nobody getting born just a lot of people dying so we could sit there on top of another shit hole of mud with Captain Rutherford still pushing for that DSO or the MC or the MCB or the YMCA with Triangles, just give him a medal will ya?
Target audience
adult

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