In All Quiet on the Western Front, most of the characters are easily shown to be effected by the war. On the battlefield, the soldiers never know what will happen next, especially when they are in the bunkers. These scenes on the battlefield become very gruesome with blood, gore, and other horrors. Young recruits are always dying, and the soldiers' friends often die in their presence. Even from the beginning of the book, the soldiers begin to stop caring about their friends' deaths, and they no longer take a moment to honor them. When Kemmerich is on his deathbed for example, the soldiers are worried about who will inherit his boots, rather than comforting him. These are only a few examples of the horrors throughout All Quiet on the Western Front which effect the soldiers of the war. …show more content…
Even further, they are less descriptive. There is no mention at all of bloodshed, except in a quotation of the prevention of such events. Rarely ever do the soldiers describe how they feel, and when they do, they are very brief. The only time description is seen is during Alex Morden's trial when the medical report states that the man's skull was crushed. This gives the reader a sense of the war having little to no impact on the