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  1. Unconditional Surrender is a 1961 novel by the British novelist Evelyn Waugh. The novel has also been published under the title The End of the Battle . Along with the other two novels in the series, it was adapted into a 2001 TV film with Daniel Craig .

    • Evelyn Waugh
    • 184
    • 1961
    • 1961
  2. Evelyn Waugh. Penguin, 2001 - Fiction - 240 pages. Waugh's own unhappy experience of being a soldier is superbly re-enacted in this story of Guy Crouchback, a Catholic and a gentleman, commissioned...

    • Evelyn Waugh
    • Penguin, 2001
    • reprint, revised
  3. Unconditional Surrender: The Conclusion of Men at Arms and Officers and Gentlemen. Evelyn Waugh. Penguin Books, 1964 - Fiction - 239 pages. By 1941, after serving in North Africa and Crete,...

  4. 11 de dez. de 2012 · Unconditional Surrender is the third novel in Waugh's brilliant Sword of Honor trilogy recording the tumultuous wartime adventures of Guy Crouchback ("the finest work of fiction in English to emerge from World War II"-Atlantic Monthly), which also comprises Men at Arms and Officers and Gentlemen.

    • (50)
    • 1961
    • Evelyn Waugh
    • Evelyn Waugh
  5. Summary. Guy Crouchback has lost his Halberdier idealism. A desk job in London gives him the chance of reconciliation with his former wife. Then, in Yugoslavia, as a liaison officer with the partisans, he finally becomes aware of the futility of a war he once saw in terms of honour. Details. Share. About the author.

  6. Unconditional Surrender is the third novel in Waugh’s brilliant Sword of Honor trilogy recording the tumultuous wartime adventures of Guy Crouchback (“the finest work of fiction in English to emerge from World War II”- Atlantic Monthly ), which also comprises Men at Arms and Officers and Gentlemen. Continue Reading. Genre: Fiction. War & Military.

  7. Through deft narrative and biting wit, the novel explores the absurdity of a pervasive class system that clings to power and privilege even in the face of existential threat. Waugh's prose cuts with surgical precision, revealing the grotesque yet comical efforts of the aristocracy to maneuver themselves into positions of comfort away from the ...