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The Human comedy

[The Human Comedy]
SAROYAN, William
Year: 
1943
Type: 
Fiction
Public: 
Adults
Publisher: 
Harcourt
Year of publication: 
1943
Pages: 
291
Moral assessment: 
Literary quality: 
Recommendable: 
Transmits values: 
Sexual content: 
Violent content: 
Vulgar or obscene language: 
Ideas that contradict Church teaching: 

Set in a small town in California during World War II, the story follows Homero Macauley, a teenager who works as a telegrapher and, through his job, becomes a witness to the joys and tragedies of the community. From this vantage point, the novel explores family bonds, the pain of loss, and hope amidst adversity.

The novel has a warm and compassionate tone, giving the characters a palpable humanity. These are not exceptional heroes, but ordinary people who embody universal values: kindness, solidarity, and perseverance. It is an intimate, close narrative that highlights the grandeur of everyday life, where the domestic and the epic merge.

A central element of the novel is the way Saroyan addresses the war without showing the battlefield. The wartime tragedy filters into the life of Ithaca—the fictional town where the story takes place—through the news that Homero must deliver. In each telegram announcing a soldier's death, the intimate pain of the families is revealed, along with the resilience of those who must carry on. The war thus becomes the backdrop for reflection on death, compassion, and the sense of community.

The novel is a celebration of life amid suffering, an invitation to recognize dignity in small things and to value the strength of human bonds. The work, more than a period story, is a parable about what it means to be human.


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