This excellent book provides a much needed exploration from the British Army's perspective of the war in Ireland from 1918-1921. Sourced from diaries, lectures and interviews the author builds a useful compendium of first person accounts of the troubles from such luminaries as Percival (of Singapore notoriety), at the time a successful Intelligence Officer with the Essex Regiment, and Montgomery. Most of the accounts are from officers, which is a pity, but the book leads with the diary entries of Pvt J P Swindlehurst of the Lancashire Fusiliers.
There is much in the book for military buffs as well those interested in the history. Where else would you find a discourse on the differing merits of the Peerless and Rolls Royce armoured cars, the use of 'Q' trucks, or an understanding of the early limitations of WT (Wireless Telegraphy - radio) in the post-WWI British Army?
In the popular fiction of the small and big screens the war has been depicted almost wholly from the perspective of the Irish Republican movement, with the Crown Forces subject to crude stereotyping and caricature in overtly partisan films like 'The Wind That Shakes The Barley'. Often these treatments are more about 'Brit-bashing' than any real attempt to get under the skin of the period. Mr Sheehan's book goes no little distance to restoring a long needed balance and is refreshing in its objective and impartial handling of the evidence.
Photographic content is comprehensive but somewhat fuzzy in reproduction. I doubt the photograph on page 95 shows Percival, although often identified as such. He was and is demonised by the Republican movement and this image reinforces those prejudices - but I venture it is not he. The sad photographs of the aftermath of ambushes on pages 211 and 214 are poignant reminders of the nature of conflicts such as these. Percival's two lectures on guerilla warfare in Ireland resonate even today, particularly his views on the dangers of road transport dependency in transferring the operational initiative to the guerilla.
Recommended and long overdue.