Birdsong, novel by Sebastian Faulks, published in 1993.
Birdsong is a story of love and war. A mixture of fact and fiction, Faulks’s fourth novel was born of the fear that the First World War was passing out of collective consciousness. At one level, it upholds the promise “We Shall Remember Them,” and Faulks’s fictional soldiers give an identity to the “lost” of the war—both the dead and “the ones they did not find.” Through unashamed emotional manipulation, Faulks solicits heartrending sympathy. He redefines heroism by presenting valour not as unthinking bravado, but as fear and the stoic endurance of pointless suffering.
The story pivots on Stephen Wraysford whose notebooks, containing his war diaries, are found by his granddaughter, Elizabeth, in 1978. In reading Wraysford’s history, Elizabeth relives his past and finds her own identity—a way “of understanding more about herself.” In 1910, Wraysford, working in the textile industry, is posted to France, where he boards with a French family, the Azaires, and falls in love with the unhappily married wife, Isabelle. The explicit intensity of Stephen’s sexual passion for Isabelle stands as vicarious sexual experience for those, like Stephen’s friend, Weir, who lost their lives without experiencing sex. And the graphic horror of the Belgian trenches, where we find Wraysford in 1916, now a junior officer in the British army, is seared into the reader’s consciousness to provide a vicarious national identity for a generation that has never experienced combat. By glimpsing how we might respond in extreme situations that arise only in national crises, Birdsong enables readers to learn, as Elizabeth learns, more about themselves. But the novel is not nationalistic, for Stephen is saved by a German soldier, and they weep together “at the bitter strangeness of human lives.”
Ultimately, the novel acknowledges that any attempt to tell the truth about war lies beyond language, for that truth is too awful both to tell and to comprehend. The “birdsong” of the title stands for the voice of a lost generation and also represents the voice of art, which attempts, and necessarily fails, to capture it. As the scholar Paul Fussell notes, birds were central to the literature of World War I, because birds were the only forms of life men sheltering in trenches could see and hear. Faulks captures this as Wraysford is commanding a detail of men digging a huge trench that, they realise, is meant to be a mass grave for the fallen after the Battle of the Somme. “The songs died on their lips,” he writes, “and the air was reclaimed by the birds.”
Birdsong was optioned for film but instead was adapted as a two-part BBC television movie in 2012. During the COVID-19 pandemic, London’s Orginal Theatre Company presented an online version, with actors appearing on split screens.