In 1930, the editor of Everyman Magazine requested entries for a
new anthology of Great War accounts. The result was a revolutionary
book unlike any other of the period; for as Malcolm Brown notes in
his introduction 'I believe it might fairly be described as a
rediscovered classic'. It was the very first collection to reveal
the many dimensions of the war through the eyes of the ordinary
soldier and offers heart-stopping renditions of the very first gas
attack; aerial dogfights above the trenches; the moment of going
over the top. Told chronologically, from the first scrambles of
1914, the drudgery of the war of attrition once the trenches had
been dug, to the final joy of Armistice.
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