This review refers to the British 2007 edition: Amiens 1918: The Last Great Battle
This book started life over 30 years ago, when McWilliams & Steel interviewed a number of surviving Australian participants in the battle. The project stalled, only to be revived some 20 years later in the form of this book. The result is a useful contribution to the study of this vital battle, in that it supplements the official histories of Britain, Australia and Canada with significant firsthand accounts.
The authors have adopted a largely narrative approach, dealing with the origins of the battle and then covering each phase of the battle, division by division. The result is a very clear description, but the depth of analysis is limited. This is made more significant by the absence of any real examination of the battle from the German side, other than through material already contained in the Allied official histories and a handful of standard works, focused on Lunderdorff.
As a consequence, while this is a very welcome contribution to the literature on this fascinating battle, and is well written and readable, the more serious reader will need to look elsewhere for a full understanding of why the events described so well by McWilliams and Steel happened the way they did.