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Back to the Front: An Accidental Historian Walks the Trenches of World War I
 
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Back to the Front: An Accidental Historian Walks the Trenches of World War I (Hardcover)

by Stephen O'Shea (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Robson Books Ltd (30 Oct 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1861051492
  • ISBN-13: 978-1861051493
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 323,106 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Review
A Canadian journalist who has walked the weary length of WW I's western front reports movingly on his experiences and more. A Paris-based correspondent for Elle, Interview, and other periodicals, O'Shea began hiking the centerpiece combat zone of the so-called Great War almost by chance during the mid-1980s. The serpentine path (to which he returned time and again) begins around Nieuport on the Belgian coast, winds through the French countryside, and ends abruptly at the frontier of neutral Switzerland. Between the two extremes, the blood-soaked track of the trenches, from which Allied and German troops rose to slaughter one another by the millions during the 52-month conflict, twists through scores of storied venues. Cases in point range from Flanders (Ypres, Passchendaele) through Artois (Armentieres, Arras, Vimy Ridge), Picardy, Champagne (Chemin des Dames, Reims), and Alsace-Lorraine (St. Mihiel, Verdun, the Argonne Forest). In his commentary as a tour guide, the author is by turns informative and censorious. Interspersing his point-to-point travelogue of abandoned redoubts, burial grounds, disputed barricades, monuments, museums, and ossuaries with short takes on the campaigns that earned hinterland villages a place in military history, he offers unsparing critiques of commanders on both sides of the fray (notably, Falkenhayn, Foch, Haig, Joffre, Nivelle, Pershing, and Petain). O'Shea also recalls his two Irish grandfathers, who survived the senseless carnage (as soldiers of the British Crown), albeit at considerable cost in mental and physical pain. Antiwar by conviction at the start of his explorations, he's something very like a militant pacifist at the end of a decade-long journey. A tellingly detailed account of a trek through yesteryear's killing fields, which unites past with present in affectingly evocative ways and with no small measure of art. (Kirkus Reviews)

Synopsis
Originally published in 1987 this is advice on achieving an attractive plot with the minimum of effort, mystique and expense. Basic information is given for the novice along with explanations of basic gardening terms and help in sorting out problems.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Haunting Evocation of The Great War, 3 Jan 2000
By A Customer
Arising out of a travel article that appeared in 'Saturday Night' magazine in 1989, Canadian journalist Stephen O'Shea has penned an outstanding literary companion to conventional histories of the Great War. Readers will find military history, literary insight, and cultural discernment skillfully woven into an enlightened reporting, one which wound up earning the commendation of eminent historian John Keegan. O'Shea's didactic journey took him from Nieuport, Belgium, through the devastation of the war's hinterlands, and on to the little-known battlegrounds around the Swiss border southwest of Basel. As such, this book proves neither a superficial sightseeing memoir, nor just another romp across the war's battlegrounds. Rather, this book ranks among the best in travel writing, on a par with say, Peter Mayne's 'The Narrow Smile'.

As he traverses this ground which still bears the lacunary scars of artillery shells and trenches, O'Shea articulates the carnage wrought by Allied commanders who endlessly threw away the lives of their men in repeatedly foolish assaults against entrenched and well-positioned German defenses. Particularly memorable are his poignant descriptions of the devastation of pastoral French countryside wrought by heavy artillery. O'Shea also offers perceptions often lost on other authors, such as his recounting of the appalling literary losses represented by the death of 133 French writers who perished in the first year of the war. Furthermore, his insights into the physiognomy of French and Belgian folk life adds an invigorating depth to his battlefield narration.

There is little to criticize in this outstanding book. O'Shea betrays a somewhat puzzling sense of corporate guilt, perhaps an odd vestige of some North American 1970s social psychology. Nevertheless, his pacifism and anti-militarism are conscientious and based in part upon the indelible testimonies of relatives who suffered in the war. Serious students will be enlightened by his 'Further Reading' section which contains recommendations for some of the best writings to come out of one of the most terrible episodes in human history. Above all, O'Shea's eloquent and refreshing style of writing makes this a profitable read and a valuable contribution to literature on the Great War.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Back to the Front, Stephen O' Shea, 7 Jun 2009
Superb book and an excellent read. Offers a first hand view of the western front. Excellent, go buy it !!
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