The Red Badge of Courage
Publisher Description
The Red Badge of Courage, Stephen Crane. Revised version of http://ota.ox.ac.uk/id/1896 . First edition published in 1895. . Original file downloaded from the InterNet Wiretap anonymous ftp server in July 1993. Initial SGML tagging carried out by Jeffrey Triggs at Bellcore on behalf of the University of Oxford Text Archive. Final corrections and parsing carried out at the University of Oxford Text Archive..
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This 1895 tale of young soldier Henry Fleming's initial experiences in combat during the Civil War still startles. Artist Vansant captures Fleming's uncertainty and fear quite well, sometimes through effectively understated facial expressions. Yet this adaptation oversimplifies Crane's portrayal of Fleming, ignoring or de-emphasizing the character's other failings: his egotism, his talent for self-justification and the "wild battle madness" underlying much of his later heroism. In Crane's book, Fleming is haunted by his desertion of the dying "tattered man"; in Vansant's version, Fleming forgets him. Though Crane's book is a landmark in realism, the author's symbolic writing turned Fleming's battlefield into a mythic realm. Vansant's conventionally realistic artwork, on the other hand, is more prosaic than Crane's brilliantly descriptive captions. This adaptation faithfully introduces the plot, characters and primary themes of Red Badge to readers unfamiliar with the original book without penetrating the full depths of Crane's masterwork.