Review:
"This is an interesting introduction to a complex subject, well illustrated as usual." --Bolling Smith, Coastal Defense Journal (August 2007) "Overall, an excellent reference with a useful bibliography containing 50 titles from each combatant nation." --Barrett Tillman, War on the Western Front (August 2007) "War on the Western Front: In the Trenches of World War I is a narrowed focus on the Western Front of the first world war and is a pick for any college-level military library strong in the era's history. Its focus is on the daily lives of soldiers: as such it provides both first-person history and survey of trench warfare and tactics which changed the strategies and nature of warfare. An excellent, well-detailed analysis." --California Bookwatch (August 2007) "Throughout the book are superb photographs and illustrations to give the reader a real sense of not only what went on during these times, but how things changed over the course of the conflict... Overall it is an outstanding compilation and at a price that makes it a real bargain to the reader. I found it a fascinating read and can highly recommend this one to you." --Scott Van Aken, modelingmadness.com (July 2007) "Overall, the authors make their case that trench warfare presented an ever changing dynamic of new ideas and experiments to break the deadlock... Recommended. General libraries, in particular, and undergraduate collections." --P.L. de Rosa, Bridgewater State College, CHOICE (April 2008) "A remarkable collection of photographs and commentary from a variety of authors allows readers to learn about the complexities of trench design (and the theories behind construction) as well as such innovations as flame-throwers, poison gas, and tanks. Readers will also get a sense of how men managed to endue the war's unprecedented change." --Nicholas Wood, Military History Quarterly (Spring 2008)
About the Author:
Editor Gary Sheffield is Professor of War Studies at the University of Birmingham and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He has published widely on military history, especially the First World War. His books include Douglas Haig: War Diaries and Letters 1914-18, co-edited with John Bourne (2005); the best-selling Forgotten Victory: The First World War - Myths and Realities (2001); and Leadership in the Trenches (2000). Authors Dr Stephen Bull is Curator of Military History and Archaeology for Lancashire County Museums with special responsibility for local regimental collections; he has also worked at the National Army Museum and the BBC. His latest exhibition is a display of Far East prisoner-of-war art at the Museum of Lancashire, Preston. Ian Drury, an experienced editor and military writer, has published books and articles on aspects of military history as varied as the Russo-Turkish War, the Confederate infantry and World War II on the Russian Front. He has made a particular study of the battle of Verdun, one result of which has been his now legendary Verdun wargame 'Hommes Soupes'. Thomas A Hoff is a long-time student and re-enactor of World War I. He combines a teaching post in History at Northeastern Illinois University, where he is currently developing a class on World War I, with work for the Chicago Police Department as a part-time detective. Martin Pegler is Senior Curator of Firearms at the Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds. He has written a number of books, including the best-selling sniper history Out of Nowhere (Osprey, 2005). In the 1980s he had the privilege of interviewing many World War I veterans, and the recordings are now part of the sound archives of the Imperial War Museum, London. Ian Sumner originally trained as a librarian in Newcastle-upon-Tyne but now devotes himself to full-time writing. He has written numerous titles for Osprey, and also several books on the history of the East Riding of Yorkshire.
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