Der Mensch ist gut by Leonhard Frank
Leonhard Frank wrote 'Der Mensch ist gut' in 1917, right in the middle of the First World War's carnage. It's not a novel with one continuous plot. Instead, it's a series of short, sharp scenes—vignettes, really—that act like snapshots of human suffering and resilience.
The Story
Frank takes you from the muddy, freezing trenches where soldiers face unimaginable fear, to the homes where women and children wait in dread for a telegram that might never come. You'll meet a soldier who shares his last bit of food with a dying enemy, a mother who loses her son and questions the very point of it all, and ordinary people trying to scrape together moments of normal life while the world falls apart. The 'story' is the collective experience of these characters, bound together by the central, haunting question posed by the title.
Why You Should Read It
This book is powerful because it doesn't preach. Frank doesn't give you a lecture on pacifism; he shows you the cost. The writing is raw and immediate—it feels like it was scribbled down in the heat of the moment, fueled by anger and a desperate need to bear witness. What got me was the contrast. Right next to a scene of utter brutality, you'll find a simple act of compassion that feels like a lifeline. It forces you to hold two opposing ideas in your head: that humans are capable of creating hell on earth, and that within that same species exists a stubborn, beautiful impulse to be good to one another. It's a tough read, but it's a necessary one.
Final Verdict
This isn't a book for when you want a light escape. It's for when you're ready to think deeply about human nature, war, and hope. It's perfect for readers interested in historical fiction that feels urgent, for anyone who loved the emotional punch of something like All Quiet on the Western Front, or for those who appreciate short, impactful prose. If you believe that the best art often comes from the darkest times, 'Der Mensch ist gut' is a stunning example. Just be prepared—it might change how you see the world.
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Mason Anderson
3 months agoNot bad at all.
Brian King
2 weeks agoHigh quality edition, very readable.
Kenneth Moore
4 months agoThe formatting on this digital edition is flawless.
Patricia Walker
9 months agoAmazing book.