I must admit to dipping in and out of this book over a long period of time, with the odd result that some parts I read several times whilst others I may have missed. The book boasts being one of the first attempts to look at the war from the point of view of the ordinary soldier. I don't know whether that is true or not, but I do believe there has been more of a shift to this perspective in recent times. Not a shift I particularly favour as I am more interested in the strategic decision making and tactical execution, than the experience on the ground. But if this book filled a lack when published, I am all for it. I picked it up because I was so impressed with Winter's destruction of Haig in a non-fiction title. Haig's Command, I think it is called.
I don't think it will suprise many readers coming to the material now, although it should not fail to move them. The privations of the soldiers are legion and Winter does well to bring that to life and give us aspects like the stench, the flies, the putridness, which we might have missed from Blackadder. But it also acts as a corrective to certain assumptions - for instance, most soldiers did not spend that much time on the front line - although being in reserve or at rest was not necessarily not dangerous, as the author points out, death having a habit of finding one out there. Lots of interesting historical detail that, if one didn't think it already, will truly make one wonder at the senseless, pointless loss of the whole affair.