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A certain matter-of-fact quality pervades the desсrіptions of the wounds inflicted and received by soldiers; the face-to-face attacks with rifle butts, spades, and grenades; the sounds, smells, and colors of death and dying in this book. Why do the soldiers regard war in such an indifferent manner? Point out dialogue and events that lead you to believe that Paul and his fellows are not as nonchalant as they sometimes sound. 5. Paul says in Chapter Six, ″I wonder whether, when I am twenty, I shall have experienced the bewildering emotions of love.″ Trace the comments and episodes throughout the book that seem to indicate that Paul does indeed experience love, in one form or another. 6. While on the front Paul daydreams about his lovely, tranquil home; when he finally makes it home on leave, he fights back visions of his comrades in the war. Why does he regret having made the trip home? In what ways does his experience there support Albert Kropp′s assertion that ″The war has ruined us for everything″? 7. As Paul stands guard over the Russian prisoners, he ponders how commands from higher-ups have transformed men so like his own countrymen into enemies and could just as swiftly turn them into friends. But his thoughts frighten him. What is ″the abyss″ to which he fears such thoughts will lead? 8. Why does Paul feel a ″strange attachment″ to the soldiers in his outfit once he returns from leave? 9. While on an especially risky patrol, Paul promises himself that, should some soldier hop into his shell-hole, Paul will be the first to strike. Once he carries out this strategy, why does he try to save the French soldier he has mortally wounded? Why does he later make promises to the dead man that he soon realizes, or decides, that he will not keep? 10. All Quiet on the Western Front abounds with reports of inadequate medical supplies and care, slipshod or shady procedures, and outright malpractice (refer to Chapters One and Ten). How could the government and army allow this problem to go unrectified? How could the soldiers tolerate it? Why didn′t more of them report, if not revolt against, the treatment they received? 11. Why do you think the author timed Paul′s death in October 1918, just before the long-rumored armistice? (Germany signed The Treaty of Versailles on November 11, 1918.) 12. When All Quiet on the Western Front debuted in the United States it drew tremendous reviews from critics. Even so, one critic tempered admiration of the book′s realism with this comment: ″It is not a great book; it has not the depth, the spiritual insight, the magnitude of interests which make up a great book″ (The New York Times Book Review, June 2, 1929). Do you agree or disagree with this assessment? What ingredients are essential to the making of a great book?