Road To War is not the best My Story I've read or the worst. It is a good book though. It opened my eyes to what the WWI was like. TERRIBLE. Daphne (Daffy) Rowntree's father goes off to war and dies. Her Mimi mother is an artist and becomes depressed and starts painting fairies. She doesn't really know how to be a mother and doesn't do what a mother usually does like doing housework etc. Then j when her brother Archibald (Archie) 18 he joins the fight. The news soon comes that he is missing and Daffy decides to search for him and joins the FANY (First Aid Nursing Yeomanry). She always wanted to do something for the soldiers so she wasn't forced. She tried knitting but wasn't very good at it so she decide to do bandage rolling. When she joins the FANY she gets sent to France and meets a few good friends that she will keep for life. She mainly drives ambulances carrying injured soldiers. Some of the parts in this book are really sad and nearly brought tears to my eyes. Here is a passage from the book: Something lay ahead, half on the road half off. Nearby was a group of cavalrymen, most still mounted. One of then was kneeling beside the object. As we drew closer, I saw that it was a horse,dead. One of its hind legs had been blown away. The soldier looked up at us, tears glittering in his eyes." I thought this was sad. This as well "I was at the canal quay this morning , and when they loaded my blesses, one of them tried to grasp my hand but his grip was to weak. I smoothed the hair from his forehead aged he whispered, "Pocket." Oh , gosh it brings a Lyon to my throat just to write about it. What happened was that her asked me to find a photo, and was surprised when I saw it, since it was of himself. He begged me to send it to his mother, and I said, "You'll be able to send it yourself when you're better." But when we arrived at the hospital , the poor boy was dead. I was the last person to speak to him and I didn't even know his name. The attendant who came with me promised he would see that the photo reaches the boys mother, and I believe him." One day Daffy meets Captain Charles Wensley-Croft when she takes him to hospital and he asks if she might visit him there. She agrees and they soon fall in love. I was eager to see what would happen to them. One day she is asked to deliver post. One of which Charles writes to his mother. She reads it and gets the wrong idea that Charles has a girlfriend, fiancée or wife back home called Mabel when in fact she's actually his 8 year old sister whom he saved from drowning when she was 2 and vowed that if she lived he would always take care of her. They love each other very much. One stormy night Daffy saves a Airedale a messenger dog on the road but meets a German solider when she takes him back to the ambulance. He tells her to move so he can kill the dog but she saves him by throwing herself in front of him and he shoots her. She wakes up in hospital and her friend Westerling visits her with an officer and explains that she noticed Daffy wasn't behind her that night when she got shot and they went back for her to find her injured. The officer Nigel pounces on the German until her drops the gun and he faints. They then put Daffy in the ambulance and take her to hospital. They congratulate her saying they're all proud of her because that dog carried an important message and if she had let the German kill it then many other lives would of been lost. Cause of her injury Daffy is sent home but all her friends waved her off. She gets letters from Charles but tells her maid to burn them because she is still convinced that Mabel is his sweetheart and that it isn't right what he says in his letters but one day she gets a visit from Charles and after he explains the Mabel thing they become close again. I assume in the future they marry and maybes have kids. She says at the end that the war has taken her father and she must except that it has taken her brother as well because the never found him. I hope the author wrote a sequel! In the book one day Daffy hands out some things made for the fighting solider a when she visits the front and meets a solider who asks for socks. Here is a line from when she hands him the socks which made me happy " I pulled out some dark green socks. There was a little message tied to them, which he examined eagerly. I remove red the knitting group adding little messages to their completed items. How lovely to know that they were so appreciated." It's true what Daffy says here when she was driving an ambulance one day with 4 injured soldiers in it and after she heard that none of then were expected to make it: "Under every brown blanket is a man - sometimes just a boy - who is loved by someone else. And on every small brown pillow is a face that a mother or brother or wife or sweetheart longs to see. Sometimes the poor faces so badly damaged they won't be recognised - that's all part of the horror of this filthy war."