Not your everyday Sergent York or Billy Bishop, mind you! But a hero nonethless. You see he did the thing that no one else would have even dare think of doing. " (Findley 10). That is the view of one person on Robert Ross see viewed him as a hero where as somebody else may have viewed him as a coward for his actions. Many peopled did in fact see his actions as cowardly and crazy, which hurt the war effort. One man on his recolections of Robert at the moment he was with the horses " They decribed Robert as some sort of raving cowboy- giving the Rebel Yell as he flew past-." (Findely 209). These interviews also give you many pieces of information you need to understand the story and other wise wouldn't have had if they hadn't inclued the interviews in the story. They turn the story into a puzzle and hope you can piece it together and understand the true meaning of it.
Throughout the book Findley uses art, literature and music to off the set the mood of war that is ongoingin the book. This is a good change of pace to off set the harsh theme of war. "Findley's The Wars is full of references to art and literature. By doing this, Findley has contrasted the beauty of art with the brutality of war." (Boone). Without Findley doing this it would have made the war seem much more real and the mood would have been somber throughout the whole play instead of just in bits and pieces. It also helps because Findley uses references to Literature which helps describe certain aspects of the story. "Taffler had long since gone and the rumour was he'd been returned to France, although his picture appeared in the Canadian Illustrated." (Findley 45). He uses the literature referecne to the Canadian Illustrated which was a magezine in the times off the War. He also used many references to art which was a big thing in Europe, with most of the famous artists hailing from there. "On the outskirts of town there was an asylum for the mad- (Van Gogh had been one of its patients).