May 102013
 

The Gallery

The Gallery

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  3 Responses to “The Gallery”

  1. 18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Fine, Forgotten War Novel With Mediterranean Setting, June 30, 2002
    By A Customer
    This review is from: The Gallery (Paperback)

    Burn’s “The Gallery” was highly acclaimed when it appeared in 1946; reviewers thought they had found a superb new talent and “war novelist” to praise. “The Gallery” is set amidst ravaged, end-of-the-war Naples, and involves an average American Joe from North America coming into contact for the first time with the softer, older southern culture of the Mediterranean, and the influence it has on him. The action centers around the Gallery Umberto I in downtown Naples, a great,, glass-topped Victorian arcade where in the various run-down bars and darkened trattorias everything is for sale, from cigarettes to liquor and women. Though the setting is squalid, the transformation worked upon the main character by his location and his relationship with a local woman forced to sell her body because of the collapsed economy is both absorbing and moving. This book is much more than a “war novel,” it is a great piece of lyrical literature well-worth searching out. If you like Joseph Heller’s “Catch-22″ or Gore Vidal’s World War II novel, “Williwaw,” or Kurt Vonnegutt’s “Farehneheit 451,” try “The Gallery,” it is more lyrical (something in the style of Tennessee Williams) than any of those (good as they are).

    Unfortunately Burns’ next book, “Lucifer with a Book,” was one of the most talked about novels of 1947 – because it dealt with the naughty goings-on at an all boys’ prep school – not something America could handle in 1947. Burns was savagely attacked by the same critics who had praised him as a war novelist. Burns left for Europe and quickly drank himself to death, never taking his place along the Mailers, Vidals, Bellows and Capotes of his generation as he deserved. The detached, independant reader will find “The Gallery” a wonderful, surprise read.

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  2. 8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    A book of Italy and the American GIs of WWII, July 6, 2003
    By 
    gac1003 “gac1003″ (Long Beach, CA) –

    The Galleria Umberto is an arcade of shops and cafés at the center of Naples, Italy. In 1944, after the Allies had taken control of the country, everyone managed to make his or her way to this galleria: the Neapolitans to watch and to take advantage of the Americans; the Americans to get drunk, to find a trick or to think.

    In “The Gallery,” the narrator takes us on a tour of the galleria, showing us the sights, sounds and people who frequent the area. Each of the 9 stories gives the reader a glimpse in to the social and sexual practices of the American GI in 1944: from a censorship office run by an egomaniac to an Italian girl finding love in an America officer’s club to a gay bar. These portraits are linked by the narrator’s own experiences from Casablanca to Naples and his realization of what love and the war mean to him.

    This novel might be considered semi-autobiographical as John Horne Burns served during World War II and undoubtedly drew inspiration from his surroudings. For example, the portrait titled “The Leaf” takes place in a censorship office; Burns also served in a censorship office while in Italy. It is a wonderful book to read. My only gripe is that many of the characters speak Italian or French, and what they say is not translated. Perhaps this works to show what it may have been like for the American soldiers, most of whom went to Italy and the rest of Europe not knowing the languages. I would like to have known what was being said, though. (This last part may only reflect the copy I was reading. There may be translations in other copies.)

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  3. 5.0 out of 5 stars
    Sentimental Journey, April 24, 2013
    By 
    J. Lindsley “many interests” (Greene N,. Y.) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)

    I read this when it was first published in the late 1940′s.

    I’m a hell of a lot wiser today then back then returning from The ETO and The PTO of World War II
    It stuck with, even so…. when i read it had been reissued i wanted to see/read what I may not have understood
    being a hayseeder hick in neasr red neck northern tier of pennsylvania.

    Sentimental journeys need to be met with open mind and dropped activities interrupting the trip into the past.

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