About This Book
A descriptive account of the British old front line on the Somme immediately before the major offensive, portraying trenches, wire, shell-pitted no-man's-land, and the tactical disadvantage of attackers forced to advance uphill against better-sited and better-equipped defenders; it situates the supply town of Albert and the river Ancre as logistical and geographic focal points, describes daily life in trenches, ruined villages, and landmarks such as a church statue, and conveys the monotony, improvisation, and endurance of soldiers while outlining roads and terrain that framed the opening assault and suggesting how the scarred landscape might later be reclaimed by peace.
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