Few Returned: Twenty-eight Days on the Russian Front, Winter 1942-1943

Few Returned: Twenty-eight Days on the Russian Front, Winter 1942-1943

Few Returned: Twenty-eight Days on the Russian Front, Winter 1942-1943

Few Returned: Twenty-eight Days on the Russian Front, Winter 1942-1943

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Overview

After World War II more than one hundred books appeared that dealt with the experience of the Italian army in Russia, and particularly the terrible winter retreat of 1942-1943. Few Returned (I piu' non ritornano) is the only one of these that is still regularly reissued in Italy.

Eugenio Corti, who was a twenty-one-year-old second lieutenant at the time, found himself, together with 30,000 Italians and a smaller contingent of Germans, encircled on the banks of the River Don by enemy forces who far outnumbered them. To break out of this encirclement, these men undertook a desperate march across the snow, with constant engagements and in temperatures ranging from -20 to -30 degrees Fahrenheit. Whereas supplies were air-dropped to the Germans, the predicament of the Italians was far more difficult: lacking gasoline, they were compelled to abandon their vehicles and to proceed without heavy arms, equipment, ammunition, or provisions. Even the wounded had to be abandoned, though it was well known that the soldiers of the Red Army"enraged by the brutality of the German invasion"killed all the enemy wounded who fell into their hands. After twenty-eight days of encirclement, only 4,000 of the 30,000 Italians made it out of the pocket.

Why is it that Corti's book, which was first published in 1947, continues after fifty years to be reprinted in Italy? Because, as Mario Apollonio of the University of Milan said, when the book first appeared: "It is a chronicle . . . but it is much more than that: behind the physical reality, there is the truth" about man at his most tragic hour. Apollonio adds: "The power of the writing immediately transforms the document into drama"; the result is a "novel-poem-drama-history." The philosopher Benedetto Croce found in Corti's book "the not infrequent gleam of human goodness and nobility." Few Returned is a classic of war literature that succeeds in bringing home the full hatefulness of war.

Eugenio Corti began writing his diary at a military hospital immediately after being repatriated from the Russian front. When in September 1943 Italy found itself cut in two by the Armistice, Corti, loyal to his officer's oath, joined up with what remained of the Italian army in the south and with those few troops participated in driving the Germans off Italian soil, fighting at the side of the British Eighth and the American Fifth Armies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826260215
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Publication date: 05/28/1997
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 14 Years

About the Author

Born in Besana Brianza, Italy, in 1921, Eugenio Corti marked his debut as a writer with Few Returned. He went on to write many works of historical fiction, including The Red Horse and The Last Soldiers of the King: Wartime Italy, 1943-1945 (University of Missouri Press).

Peter Edward Levy teaches English at the University of Siena in Italy. He has published translations of contemporary Italian poetry and critical essays on British poets.

Table of Contents

Contents Foreword by Carlo D'Este From the Don to Arbuzov 1: December 19 2: December 19 3: December 20 4: December 21 5: December 21 Arbuzov ("The Valley of Death") 6: December 22–24 7: December 22–24 8: December 22–24 9: December 22–24 10: December 22–24 11: December 22–24 12: December 22–24 13: December 22–24 14: December 22–24 From Arbuzov to Chertkovo 15: December 25 16: December 25 17: December 26 18: December 26 Chertkovo 19: December 27 20: December 28–31 21: December 28–31 22: December 28–31 23: January 1–5 24: January 1–5 25: January 6–9 26: January 6–9 27: January 10–14 From Chertkovo to Our Lines 28: January 15 29: January 16 30: January 16 Out of the Encirclement 31 Author's Notes
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