To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Somme

Hardback

Main Details

Title Somme
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Richard Van Emden
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:355
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 175
Category/GenreFirst world war
ISBN/Barcode 9781473855212
ClassificationsDewey:940.4272
Audience
General
Illustrations 100 illustrations

Publishing Details

Publisher Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Imprint Pen & Sword Military
Publication Date 30 March 2016
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

The offensive on the Somme took place between July and November 1916 and is perhaps the most iconic battle of the Great War. It was there that Kitchener's famous 'Pals' Battalions were first sent into action en masse and it was a battlefield where many of the dreams and aspirations of a nation, hopeful of victory, were agonizingly dashed. Because of its legendary status, the Somme has been the subject of many books, and many more will come out next year. However, nothing has ever been published on the Battle in which the soldiers' own photographs have been used to illustrate both the campaign's extraordinary comradeship and its carnage. AUTHOR: Richard Van Emden graduated from Newcastle University in 1988, and obtained an MA from Reading University in the following year. After working as a journalist he became a freelance writer and researcher. Having worked on several historically-based television series, he then began to write. SELLING POINTS: . Approx 150 never-before-published images of the campaign taken by the men who fought. . New and rarely-read accounts of the fighting written by the men who were there. . Includes images taken on the first day of the battle, the most catastrophic day in British military history, as well as never-before seen images of the world's first tanks deployed in September 1916. . A complete story of the British effort in Picardy, from their first arrival in 1915 to the end of the campaign. .The third in a trilogy of books by Richard van Emden. The other two books are: 'Tommy's War' which covers the entire war on the Western Front in privately-taken images and most recently, 'Gallipoli' using never-before-seen privately-taken images of the campaign.

Author Biography

RICHARD VAN EMDEN graduated from Newcastle University in 1988, and obtained an MA from Reading University in the following year. After working as a journalist he became a freelance writer and researcher. Having worked on several historically-based television series, he wrote his first book, Tickled to Death to Go which he has followed up with several highly acclaimed and commercially successful titles, including Britain's Last Tommies, Boy Soldiers, The Last Fighting Tommy, The Quick and the Dead, Meeting the Enemy and Tommy's Ark.

Reviews

"As featured in ''Conspiracy' to lure underage boys to war.'"--The Sunday Times "Soldiers in the British Army risked severe discipline for taking photographs on the battlefield. This illustrated book for researchers, history buffs, and students offers a detailed impression of the fight for the River Somme in WWI, which was one of the most brutal fronts of the war, through the lenses of ordinary British soldiers with their own contraband cameras. The sepia photos (170 total) are accompanied by excerpts from soldiers' diaries, letters, and memoirs. The first-person recollections are separated by brief introductions and woven into an accessible chronological narrative. The book's introduction contains historical background on the war, plus information on the men's cameras and uses of the photos, which were often sold to journalists or sent to families of the dead and wounded. Through the photos and first-person accounts, the book chronicles events over a period of 20 months, from the year before the offensive began, through the four-month battle, and the four months after the battle. Author Richard van Emden has written 17 books on WWI history"--ProtoView "This is a wonderful book, filled with new or rarely-before-seen sepia-tinted photos, many from the soldiers' own private collections."--World War One Illustrated, Summer 2018