'A remarkable record - vivid, modest, intelligent and unusually
frank.' Harold Nicolson
'It rings true in every sentence.' Bernard Fergusson
In Jan 1944, Allied forces landed at Anzio and Nettuno on the
eastern coast of Italy in the attempt to skirt the German lines and
secure the passage to Rome. Success depended upon the element of
surprise, but the landings stalled and the Allied soldiers found
themselves hemmed in at the beachhead in what become known as the
Battle of Anzio.
The environment was sodden and humid, and the fighting intense.
It was into this desperate situation that Raleigh Trevelyan, then a
twenty-year-old subaltern, found himself leading his platoon, right
to the most dangerous, forward position, known as 'the
Fortress'.
The resulting account, based on Trevelyan's diaries of the time,
is one of the most eloquent records of close combat and of the
relentless horror of modern warfare written. In direct, intimate
prose, it describes the lives, and deaths, of ordinary men, and is
a poignant testimony of innocence eroded by the awfulness of
war.
General
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