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The First World War by John Keegan
The First World War by John Keegan






He was the only one of the family to survive what Francois Maurois, in his introduction, calls the "human holocaust" of the persecution of the Jews, which began with the restrictions, the singularization of the yellow star, the enclosure within the ghetto, and went on to the mass deportations to the ovens of Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Here he dispatches British general Douglas Haig: “On the Somme he had sent the flower of British youth to death or mutilation at Passchendaele he had tipped the survivors into the slough of despond.” A narrative that yields insight at every turn on this near-endless stalemate, as well as serving as an object lesson on the dark mysteries that await even those best-prepared for war.Įlie Wiesel spent his early years in a small Transylvanian town as one of four children.

The First World War by John Keegan The First World War by John Keegan

He renders all of this in somber prose that often rises to eloquence. He points out the unusual tragedies resulting from the war, such as secluded rural establishments where disfigured veterans could take holidays together, as well as its numerous ironic consequences. He excels equally in explaining how the best-laid strategies went awry, in measuring commanders” strengths and weaknesses, and in discussing how technology had not yet developed enough to enable effective communications between the front and the rear in battle. Keegan’s versatility is evident on every page. He consistently underscores the war’s body blow to civilization, noting not only its staggering casualty rates (e.g., two out of every nine French soldiers who went to war never came home) but the chaos that gave rise to totalitarianism afterward. Keegan remedies that with a traditional strategy-and-tactics study that is also informed by deep personal feeling for the subject (his father, two uncles, and father-in-law all served and survived).

The First World War by John Keegan The First World War by John Keegan

The shattering effects of the “war to end all wars” have been depicted unforgettably by novelists and poets such as Hemingway, Remarque, Owen, and Brooke, but seldom so memorably by historians. In this sterling account of the tragic and unnecessary conflict that inaugurated a century of horror, British military historian Keegan (Fields of Battle: The Wars for North America, 1996, etc.) ranges from Olympian assessments of leaders to searing depictions of suffering common soldiers.








The First World War by John Keegan