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A Month at the Front - The Diary of an Unknown Soldier (Hardcover, 2nd edition)
Loot Price: R218
Discovery Miles 2 180
You Save: R22
(9%)
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A Month at the Front - The Diary of an Unknown Soldier (Hardcover, 2nd edition)
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List price R240
Loot Price R218
Discovery Miles 2 180
You Save R22 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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In July 1917, a young man in the 12th East Surrey Regiment kept a
journal of his experiences at the front. This poignant and moving
account is narrated with a keen sense of observation, bringing to
life the sights, sounds, smells, and horrors of war. The anonymous
author candidly describes his daily life: dodging shells to fetch
meals from the rations cart; his regiment lost on a march, straying
perilously near enemy lines; the selfishness of his commanding
officer; the daily distribution of rum; the soar of shells ('whiz
bangs') above his head, communicating by sign with a captured
German soldier living in his trench; catching sleep in snatches 10
or fifteen minutes; and always, the endless mud. He begins
understatedly: 'The first night passed uneventfully, except that we
were shelled,' describing his journey to the front: 'It was nothing
unusual to come across a dead horse sometimes two with great holes
in their sides caused by shells, and now and then a dead comrade
would be lying waiting for burial.' Amid the horrors of war, there
is humour, for example, in his pithy description of breakfast:
'Bread and jam and mud but no drink,' or in the account of the
menacing shapes which advance slowly one foggy evening over a
period of several hours. 'In the morning we discovered that a good
many of these Germans were nothing more than a few short willow
shrubs waving about in the breeze. We had a good laugh.' Gradually,
he describes how one by one, his fellow soldiers in his beloved
12th East Surreys fall until he is left with just three of his
mates. Trapped in a hole in the ground, he sees an enemy soldier
lob a grenade at him and turns face down in the mud to receive the
blow: 'This I thought is the end, so far as I am concerned.'
Landing on his back, the grenade failed to explode. The narrative
ends abruptly, as he is taken prisoner by the Enemy. This brief,
highly personal and compelling account of one soldier's experience,
with a short introduction, will appeal to anyone with an interest
in the human condition.
General
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