Writing About Modern War and Battles in Fiction
War Has Changed - And So Must We There was a time when war, at least in fiction, was a matter of mud, steel, and eye contact. Men in trenches. Horses breaking lines. Bayonets fixed. Orders shouted over cannon smoke. Even when technology advanced - tanks, aircraft, submarines - the drama remained visible. You could see the enemy. You could charge him. You could lock eyes before killing him. Modern war has dismantled that intimacy. And that changes everything for us as writers. Because if war changes, story changes. You cannot write twenty-first-century battle scenes with nineteenth-century assumptions. The emotional architecture has shifted. The theatre of combat has expanded beyond the horizon. And the psychological distance between cause and consequence has widened in ways that are profoundly unsettling. Let’s explore what that means for your war stories - and how you must adapt. The Disappearance of the Battlefield In older war fiction, the battlefield was a place. A f...