![]() ![]() The Guardian and The Independent have both remarked on the novel's emotionally charged premise. Sadler's later decision about his own future adds yet another sensational facet. Readers do not learn the exact circumstances of Bancroft's death until late in the novel, and when they are revealed, the emphasis on Sadler's response makes him appear both immature and impulsively cruel. Also a friend and sexual partner who refuses to consider their encounters as more than aberrations, Bancroft emerges as a flawed yet mythologized man - all of which creates a dramatic plot that depends on secrecy and revolves around Sadler's pain. Sadler is the anti-hero who cannot forgive himself for his role in the death of Will Bancroft, the titular absolutist who begins as a fellow recruit and later renounces fighting after witnessing the killing of a prisoner-of-war. These feelings partly stem from spurned homosexual love in a time when such partnerships were considered crimes. Splicing scenes from Tristan Sadler's visits to Norwich, England (1919) with flashbacks of his training days in Aldershot, England and his struggles in the trenches of World War I France (1916), then forwarding to an evening in his life as an 81-year-old author in London (1979), John Boyne's The Absolutist examines one man's lifetime of unresolved guilt. ![]() A tale of passion, jealousy, heroism, and betrayal set in the aftermath of World War I ![]()
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