I read books by Helen Dore Boylston as a teen, but never read any of her non-fiction. So, when I saw available The War Diary of a Nurse, I purchased it in the Kindle format. It is a diary, sometimes she had an entry and other times, she didn’t write for a week. Occasionally the entry was frivolous, slightly juvenile, or naively hopeful, but often, you felt the shear intensity, the blinding carnage inflicted on young men in the trenches and then sent-up to the mobile hospital. Across her diary flashes real pictures from a front-line nurse in France during WWI. She tells of night-upon-night shelling, where she had to grab her gear, blankets, and trudge into a pre-arranged fox hole, hopeful of finding some sleep out in the elements. She experienced sleep deprivation, when there was so much to do and a scarcity of nurses. She treats her injured soldiers as her family and they treat her as family also. You sense that for her, it is not a job or even a vocation, it is a dedicated calling. You also see the many ways, both positive, negative, and humorous that soldiers, nurses, and all, deal with the transient nature of life at this point-in-time. In the midst of the horror, she was able to step-back and view the beauty of nature around her and write convincingly about what she saw. Humorous, as well as sad was the few entries about her dog “Pat.” That dog was a de-stressor for her and when it died; oh, how that told a story. She was not even able to leave her post to grieve. It was well-worth the time spent reading, informative and enlightening. Rate 3.8