Six Weeks: The Short and Gallant Life of the British Officer in the First World War

Hardback Published on: 28/10/2010
Price: £20.00
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Synopsis

With their Latin lessons still resounding in their minds, many boys during the Great War went straight from the classroom to the most dangerous job in the world - that of junior officer on the Western Front. Although desperately aware of how many of their predecessors had fallen before them, nearly all stepped forward, unflinchingly, to do their duty. The average the life expectancy of a subaltern in the trenches was a mere six weeks. In this remarkable book, John Lewis-Stempel focuses on the forgotten men who truly won Britain's victory in the First World War - the subalterns, lieutenants and captains of the Army, the leaders in the trenches, the first 'over the top,' the last to retreat. Basing his narrative on a huge range of first-person accounts, including the poignant letters and diaries sent home or to their old schools, the author reveals what motivated these boy-men to act in such an extraordinary, heroic way. He describes their brief, brilliant lives in and out of the earth world of the trenches, the tireless ways they cared for their men, and how they tried to behave with honour in a world where their values and codes were quite literally being shot to pieces.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: Orion Publishing Co
  • ISBN: 9780297860068
  • Dimensions: 242 x 162 x 34 mm
  • Weight: 662g

Customer Reviews

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Six Weeks
Essential reading if you want to understand
This book looks in detail at the whole arc of what happened to those young men who left public school or university and went more or less straight into the... READ MORE
Chris
Six Weeks
OK, but a little limited
I read this to get a feel for the experience of one of my mothers' cousins, an English grammar school pupil who got into Cambridge University, joined the O... READ MORE
IanfromAberdeen