Monday, December 22, 2025

'Lust for Life': The Van Gogh book designed to fit in pockets of U.S. soldiers during the Second World War
















[The 1944 Armed Forces Edition novel (above) is now rare, since it was "not to be made available to civilians."] 

Irving Stone’s 1934 bestseller Lust for Life: A Novel based on the Life of Van Gogh has sold over 25 million copies, but the most unusual edition in English is one produced during the Second World War for US forces serving overseas. Lust for Life was only one of the 1,322 titles that were published as an "Armed Services Edition," in a special format that was designed to be troop-friendly.

These 1944 wartime copies of Lust for Life are scarce and the few which do survive, like our example, tend to be bashed up, because they were often kept in the pockets of U.S. uniforms. The thin pages have browned after more than 80 years, since paper was in short supply and the books were only intended to last for the duration of the war. 

Their covers state that they are "U.S. government property." The books are "not to be resold or made available to civilians," so perhaps technically we should not have bought the copy displayed here.

Holding a copy, one wonders who was the first soldier to have been given it, and in which battlefield they were serving. After being read, these books were usually passed on to colleagues, and they were produced in such a way that they could be read by at least six people before falling apart. And one also wonders into whose hands our copy has passed through in the 80 years since the war, long after the original soldier would have died.

Although Stone's novel was initially rejected by 17 publishers, it was eventually taken up and had been released in 1934. Based on Van Gogh's published letters, the fictionalized account of his life was to have a profound impact on how the public perceived the artist.

Lust for Life had proved an immediate success, making it an obvious candidate for inclusion as an Armed Forces Edition. No doubt the word "lust" in the title would have appealed to young serving men, although nothing in the actual novel could be described as erotic.

The idea of Armed Forces Editions was simple. Troops often had time on their hands between periods of intense activity, and reading would provide both entertainment and education. It was also a subtle response to the Nazis' 1933 "burning of the books," particularly those by Jewish and socialist writers.

The Armed Forces Editions needed to be small, to fit into trouser pockets. Most were 11cm by 17cm, about the size of a postcard. They were printed in a horizontal format, stapled on the left side (conventional binding might have been problematic in tropical climates and with glue-eating insects and mildew).

The books were printed on very thin paper, to reduce the weight when the use of paper was restricted. They were printed on presses that were normally used for magazines, at a time when the circulation of periodicals was down because of the war.

Battle conditions were stressful and lighting conditions not ideal, so the books were produced to be as readable as possible. The text was in two columns, with just around eight words to a column.













[The Prologue of Lust for Life, printed on the now-browned paper of the Armed Services Edition.]

Altogether a total of 123 million Armed Services Edition books of the various titles were printed from 1943 until 1947. Distribution was a complex logistical operation. Some copies were dropped by parachute to troops on remote Pacific islands. In southern England, just before the June 1944 Normandy Landings, each soldier was given one of the series as they embarked on the dangerous invasion.

Seducing Title

Stone was delighted that Lust for Life was selected as an Armed Services Edition, later describing the project as "one of the most significant accomplishments of our war effort." Soldiers would write to him, some saying that they “read a book straight through for the first time in their lives." Stone asked not to receive royalties, regarding it as his modest contribution to the venture. 

At 512 pages, Lust for Life was the longest book produced as an Armed Forces Edition. Despite its length, the thin paper meant that the spine is less than 2cm wide and it weighs just under 200g. During the war the cost of producing each copy of Lust for Life was about 6 cents. Around 100,000 were printed, although very few copies still survive.

Lust for Life's cover carries the inscription “L-29”, in the upper-left corner. “L” means that it was produced in the 11th month of the project, and the Stone novel was 29th out of the 32 titles released in August 1944. Other books that month included Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897), W. Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage (1915) and Lytton Strachey's Eminent Victorians (1918).

What would the soldiers have made of Stone’s story of the struggles faced by Van Gogh? Perhaps it offered some consolation at a time when they themselves were facing extreme stress, far from their loved ones.

Designed as mass-produced books to be digested and discarded, the Armed Forces Editions paved the way for the development of cheap paperback books after the war, revolutionizing book-buying habits. Although the publishers Pocket Books (US) and Penguin Books (UK) had both been founded in the 1930s, they really thrived from the 1950s.

In 1951, Pocket Books brought out a paperback of Lust for Life, produced in a conventional format (at 35 cents). Gone was the austere Armed Forces Edition style of cover, to be replaced by the sensationalist approach of “pulp fiction” (below).


















[via The Art Newspaper]

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Innumerable Armed Forces Edition novels are for sale on eBay.

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