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Fires on the Plain (novel)

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Original title
  
Nobi

Country
  
Japan

Published in English
  
1957

Author
  
Shōhei Ōoka

Genre
  
War novel

3.9/5
Goodreads

Translator
  
Ivan Morris

Publication date
  
1951

Originally published
  
1951

Page count
  
246

Adaptations
  
Fires on the Plain (1959)

Fires on the Plain (novel) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaencc6Fir

Language
  
Japanese, English (translated)

Publishers
  
Harvill Secker (UK), Alfred A. Knopf (US)

Similar
  
War Novels, Other books

Fires on the Plain (Japanese: 野火 Nobi) is a Yomiuri Prize-winning novel by Ooka Shohei, published in 1951. It describes the experiences of a soldier in the routed Imperial Japanese Army on the Philippines in the final days of World War II.

Contents

Summary

The story is told through the eyes of a Private Tamura who, after being thrown out by his own company, chooses to desert the military altogether and wanders aimlessly through the Philippine jungle during the Allied campaign. Descending into delirium, Tamura is forced to confront nature, his childhood faith, hunger, his own mortality, and in the end, cannibalism.

Literary significance and criticism

The book received the Yomiuri Prize and, along with Tsukamaru made, is perhaps the best-known of Ooka's work among English readers. An English language translation by Ivan Morris was completed in 1957. It was made into a film of the same name in 1959, directed by Kon Ichikawa and starring Eiji Funakoshi. David C. Stahl has noted that Morris expunged sections where the narrator makes clear that he is manipulating the memoir, while Ichikawa focused on the helplessness of the individual in the face of war. In both versions, the Tamura character is more passive and weak than in the original work.

Morris, writing in his introduction in the 1957 English version that he translated, praised the book as one of the most 'powerful accounts of the obscenity of war that has ever been written'. In his view, the only other comparable novels of the Second World War, published up to that time (1957), were Stalingrad by Theodor Plievier (1948) and Look Down in Mercy by Walter Baxter (1951).

References

Fires on the Plain (novel) Wikipedia