This is the first volume of a two-volume account of the life of First World War poet and autobiographer Siegfried Sassoon. This weighty first volume takes the reader up to the end of Sassoon's participation in the First World War. It is particularly detailed on the background of his mother's family, the engineering dynasty of the Thornycrofts. Anyone who has read either Michael Thorpe's (now sadly out-of-print) account of Sassoon, "Siegfried Sassoon : A Critical Study" (OUP, 1967) or Paul Moeyes's more recent biography "Siegfried Sassoon : Scorched Glory" (Macmillan, 1997) will already be familiar with much of the material in Moorcroft Wilson's book, and in particular, the details of his father's family.
"The Making of a War Poet", does, however, cover the background of Sassoon's homosexuality in more detail than either of the aforementioned accounts did. It will be interesting to see what Moorcroft Wilson makes of his lengthy relationship with Stephen Tennant and his marriage to Hester Gatty.
Fans of Pat Barker's "Regeneration" trilogy (Viking, 1996) may be put off buying this biography by its price - particularly in view of the fact that this first volume covers much the same ground that Pat Barker has covered in her trilogy, and that Sassoon himself covered in his many semi-autobiographical and autobiographical accounts of his life. (See "Memoirs of a Fox-hunting Man", "Memoirs of an Infantry Officer", "Sherston's Progress", "The Old Century and Seven More Years", "The Weald of Youth" and "Siegfried's Journey", Faber and Faber).
However if you have the price of the book to spare and time to read it then you will probably enjoy this book. Myself, I shall be interested to read volume two when it appears.