cover image In Memoriam

In Memoriam

Alice Winn. Knopf, $29 (400p) ISBN 978-0-593-53456-4

Winn’s superb debut chronicles a romance between two English boarding school classmates during WWI. Sidney “Elly” Ellwood is in love with Henry Gaunt, but fears his desires are unrequited; the other feels the same, but neither know it. After Henry enlists in the Army, Elly signs up, but their reunion in Flanders is muted and Henry hardly speaks to Elly. Eventually they have a sexual encounter, but Elly wonders what it means for Henry, and whether it’s more than a “convenient addition to their friendship.” Meanwhile, both men grapple with the realities of war, which Winn vividly renders with descriptions of the wounded (blood clings to a soldier’s hair and eyelashes before “dribbling down his chin”) and the “constant indignities [that] clotted the mind,” such as food covered in flies. After one of the lovers goes off to battle and doesn’t return, the other is left to assume the worst. Amid the chaos, Winn stages excellent action scenes: a tense scouting mission, as well as a tunnel-digging episode involving an escape from a German POW camp. The hunger the men feel, as well as their shell shock, is palpable, but it is the men’s love for each other that resonates. This is a remarkable achievement. Agent: Anna Stein, Curtis Brown. (Mar.)