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Words from the firing line
Sir Walter Wood was well known for his anthologies of descriptions
and personal accounts of military experiences and other deeds that
forged the British Empire. The outbreak of the First World War in
the summer of 1914 provided him with an enormous resource of
material which he gleaned from interviews with British soldiers and
sailors returning from the battlefield. During the first two years
of the conflict Wood collected, and published in two volumes, forty
two gripping accounts, from both officers and men-including
cavalrymen, infantrymen, engineers, dispatch riders, artillerymen
and a host of others who were engaged in the fighting. 'In the Line
of Battle, ' he concentrated on the opening campaigns of the war,
including the retreat from Mons, the battles of the Marne and Aisne
to the First Battle of Ypres, and included first hand accounts of
early naval engagements and the German naval raid on Hartlepool.
'Soldiers Stories of the War, ' mainly covered the campaigns of
1915 on the Western Front, but also included the Dardanelles
expedition. This unique, good value Leonaur edition, published to
coincide with the centenary of the outbreak of the Great War,
brings together the full content of both books in one substantial
edition. Absolutely nothing can compare with the words of those
recounting their very recent experiences and in this edition, those
voices reach across time to provide powerful, poignant and
revealing insights into the First World War.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
Nets, mines and bullets
Very rarely, as we warm our hands by a coal fire or eat our fish
supper, do we think about what it took to heat our rooms or fill
our plates. We may feel grateful that the task was fortunately
undertaken by others-that it is something we would not wish to do
ourselves-but nothing more. The life of the fishermen of Northern
waters is, and always has been, a perilous one, many brave sailors
have drowned in pursuit of food for our nation. When war came the
fishing fleet, aware of its duty, did not dry dock and hang its
nets until peace returned. It still set out to fish, aware that the
perils of its trade would be worsened by the presence of an enemy
that knows that a hungry nation will be subdued more quickly. It
would have been enough if that was all British fishermen had done,
but they also gathered intelligence, cleared mines, fought actions
from armed fishing vessels and many other incredible acts of
courage and devotion. These were not men whose achievements were
seen as glamorous, but they were nonetheless brave, unsung heroes
in war as well as in peace. This book details the actions of
British Fishermen in Northern waters during the First World War; it
is, of course, an account so full of action and incident that it is
essential reading for those interested in the study of maritime
warfare.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
Published long before the importance of early childhood education
was formally recognised in the educational landscape this book
explores the significance of play for young children. The volume
includes an appendix on Montessori education.
Published long before the importance of early childhood education
was formally recognised in the educational landscape this book
explores the significance of play for young children. The volume
includes an appendix on Montessori education.
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