Stephen Crane's Account Of War Analysis

133 Words1 Page

Stephen Crane’s approach to writing about war struck oddly with the reader right from the beginning. Thoughts running through the youth’s head do not sound like those of a hero. He has no purpose in this war, yet he fights in it anyway. The lack of a mighty American lumberjack hero as a protagonist immediately sets this story on a different track than the usual romantic, vivid, traditional, honorable accounts of war. The youth has no idea what he is getting himself into. Stephen Crane definitely gives the more vivid and realistic account of battle. The gruesome contortions of men and shifting shadows of the enemy among the fields certainly give the reader a more deadlier feeling than in Boyer’s letter, where it feels almost like the entire

Open Document