About This Book
A colloquial first-person memoir recounts a soldier’s episodic experiences of camp life, marching, and front-line hardship during the Great War. Through anecdotal chapters the narrator describes daily struggles with mud, hunger, illness, and the humor and camaraderie that sustain men in the trenches, alongside brief civilian encounters and small romances. Vivid accounts of named actions such as Château-Thierry, the St.-Mihiel salient, and operations beyond Verdun are balanced with reflections on logistics, mishaps, and the plainspoken attitudes of ordinary fighters, producing an impressionistic portrait of wartime endurance and morale.
About the Author
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