An interesting book with a strange structure. Each chapter is a famous person who served in Word War I. In meticulous detail, by consulting war diaries kept by the army or consulting memoirs or other primary sources, the authors walk you through the service of each individual. Often these stories are desperate, sad, strange, and horrible. All of them contain remarkable valor and none of them glorify the war.
What's odd about the book is that each chapter starts with the service of the individual, usually right when they enlist, and it walks you through their experience. Then there is a break and they give you a biographical summary of the individual before they enlist and what happens to them after they leave the army. It's a lot like reading the middle of the story first.
Also, as a non-British person, it wasn't always clear to me why these individuals were famous until I got to the biographical summary at the end of each chapter. However, the authors will often insinuate that you should be amazed by what this person is doing because they are, you know, that famous person we all know - which I course I didn't.
I'm not sure why they didn't just tell the stories of these individuals in the proper order, maybe they thought their audience would only be in the U.K. and didn't want to bore them with details they already knew. Hard to say. But it would have been a better book had they not chosen this structure.
That said, the writing in the book is very good. Clear, succinct, and evocative. There are sections of this book I won't soon forget, and it has solidly seared in my brain the horrors of war.