"…[An] extremely well-researched and level-headed account of André Gide's war years and their reconfiguration after the Armistice … van Tuyl is an excellent guide through a murky and ugly period." — South Atlantic Review"…this is a provocative and well-written study." — Times Literary Supplement"...[this] useful book presents an innovative analysis of the vagaries of Gide's meandering … Gide makes use of his texts as vehicles for retouching his own image, and his case serves as a uniquely creative response to the problem of the intellectual faced with the destabilizing force of war." — The French Review"Van Tuyl has assembled a wide range of well-researched and well-supported arguments that restore to its necessary breadth and depth the historical and ideological context of the period. The book is a clear, concise, and thorough treatment of Gide's activities around World War II and is a polished reference work that will be invaluable to scholars and students of Gide for years to come." — Walter Putnam, The University of New Mexico"This is an extraordinary look into a man who alleged utter frankness but could only be as honest as his changing view of himself permitted." — Kenneth Krauss, author of The Drama of Fallen France: Reading la Comédie sans Tickets