Jünger 's writings intertwine descriptions of daily life with graphic depictions of war. Death is portrayed as a normality in the day to day activities on the front so one gets a true sense of what daily life for a solider was like. Most of the war was a stalemate and featured long periods of waiting broken up by brief but intense combat and readers get a true sense of what the war was really like because Jünger 's memoir parallels this. Day-to-day activities are broken up by fighting and loss and then day-to-day activities resume and the cycle continues. The sense of human life having little value is clear. No one gives death a second thought and it is apparent that little meaning comes from it. Roland 's death served no military purpose and was not heroic and I just hoped that this was not the case for all. In Storm of Steel death it is not portrayed as heroic but rather part of normal day to day events which is also evident in Jünger 's detached and to-the-point style. Jünger describes the soldiers who lose their lives on the front as, “men who answered the demands of the
Jünger 's writings intertwine descriptions of daily life with graphic depictions of war. Death is portrayed as a normality in the day to day activities on the front so one gets a true sense of what daily life for a solider was like. Most of the war was a stalemate and featured long periods of waiting broken up by brief but intense combat and readers get a true sense of what the war was really like because Jünger 's memoir parallels this. Day-to-day activities are broken up by fighting and loss and then day-to-day activities resume and the cycle continues. The sense of human life having little value is clear. No one gives death a second thought and it is apparent that little meaning comes from it. Roland 's death served no military purpose and was not heroic and I just hoped that this was not the case for all. In Storm of Steel death it is not portrayed as heroic but rather part of normal day to day events which is also evident in Jünger 's detached and to-the-point style. Jünger describes the soldiers who lose their lives on the front as, “men who answered the demands of the