The Road Back

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The Road Back
File:Erich Maria Remarque - Der Weg zurück 1931.jpg
First edition cover
AuthorErich Maria Remarque
Original titleDer Weg zurück
TranslatorArthur Wesley Wheen
LanguageGerman
GenreWar novel
PublisherPropyläen Verlag (German)
Little, Brown & Co (English)
Publication date
April 1931
Publication placeGermany
Published in English
May 1931
Media typePrint (Hardback)
OCLC909194
Preceded byAll Quiet on the Western Front 

The Road Back, also translated as The Way Back,[1] (German: Der Weg zurück) is a novel by German author Erich Maria Remarque, commonly regarded as a sequel to his 1929 novel All Quiet on the Western Front.[1][2] It was first serialized in the German newspaper Vossische Zeitung between December 1930 and January 1931, and published in book form in April 1931.

Although the book follows different characters from those in All Quiet on the Western Front, it can be assumed that they were in the same company, as the characters recall other characters from the earlier novel. Tjaden is the only member of the 2nd Company to feature prominently in both books.

Set a few weeks after the end of All Quiet on the Western Front, the novel deals with the fall of the German Empire[2] and details the experience of young men in Germany who have returned from the trenches of World War I and are trying to integrate back into civilian life. Its most salient feature is the main characters' pessimism about contemporary society which, they feel, is morally bankrupt because it has allegedly caused the war and apparently does not wish to reform itself.

For example in one scene, a group of student veterans are forced to endure a corny speech by their professor who eulogizes their fallen comrades as having entered a “long sleep beneath the green grasses.” The student veterans mock the professor for his naive platitudes with one, Westerholt shouting, “in the mud of shell holes they are lying, knocked rotten, ripped in pieces, gone down into the bog—Green grasses!" [3]

Reception

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The book was banned during Nazi rule.[2]

Preservation

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Under the Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, the book will enter the public domain in the United States in 2027, with the first half of the serialized version expiring first in 2026.

Adaptations

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English translations

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References

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