George
Patton is a name that used to be household.
A gruff persona who was able to lead American forces to victory in both
world wars, it’s only in the past few decades, as survivors of those eras pass
on, that the General’s name has begun to slip from public memory. Part proud cowboy and part bulldog, his was,
in many ways, the face of the American war front in Europe—a fact glorified in
the 1970 film titled simply Patton. Beyond the biographical and deep into the
personal, Andy Duncan’s 1999 novella Fortitude
is a hallucinatory, prognostic, and poignant look beyond the unyielding façade
of the general.
‘Fortitude’
defined as “mental strength and courage that allows someone to face danger, pain,
etc.” according to Merriam-Webster’s Online, ‘bull-headed’ is a less formal way
of stating George Patton’s worldview. Angry
and ashamed of cowardly behavior, he led armies standing in the van, empowering
them with simple speeches that appealed to their base emotions. An idealized war hero perhaps only in presentation,
the man’s thoughts remain something of a mystery—something which Duncan, who
obviously did his homework before writing Fortitude,
attempts to speculate upon. The result
is appealing biographical material in non-pedantic form.
Fortitude is something of a David
Lynch film. Duncan selects scenes and
moments, very few of which are actually battle related, from Patton’s life, and
presents them in the guise that from the very beginning Patton knew his
fate. Doubt creeps in as a result, but
inevitably he steps to the podium to take the verdict he knows is coming. Opening with some of his first military
action on the Texas border involving Mexican rebels, Patton afterwards makes a
list of the important moments of his future, hoping to decide whether or not to
avoid them. Complicating matters are the
illusions that appear—his father and grandfather, all involved with war in some
way, as well as moments from the more distant past, Scotland, England, and
France among them.
Duncan
one of the top writers of short fiction today, Patton’s personal moments are
wonderfully executed and presented.
Patton’s meeting with Dwight Eisenhower, a run-in with a repairwoman
fixing a wooden tank, resting in a bomb crater with his savior after being
shot, and meeting with a soldier afraid to fight are carefully crafted to
create the perfect mood. Wikipedia may
be the go-to source for biographical information today, but reading Fortitude gives Patton’s life vitality the page simply can't.
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