The study of Heinrich Böll and the rubble literature is a new research problem, showing the characteristics of a part of the German post-war literature of the 20th century. Heinrich Böll's novel titled in German language And Never Said a Word (Und Sagte Kein Einziges Wort) published in 1953 has characteristics of rubble literature. The central character of novels belonging to the rubble literature is normally a soldier returning from the war with physical injuries and unhealable mental injuries. Fred Bogner, the Und Sagte Kein Einziges Wort’s main character left the war to come home show is full of dark memories, the haunting fear of corporal punishments that were popular in the war, and became an irritable, rough person. Fred uses alcohol and drunkenness to escape the darkness of the past and the reality of poverty that his family is facing day by day. In this novel, Heinrich Böll used a structure of fragmentation with two parallel, intertwined narrative perspectives and reflected the ruined fractures of a post-war generation, sounded the alarm to humanity, and conveyed the message of healing the pain of war.