I had previously been impressed with Farley Mowat's account of his WWII service, "And No Birds Sang" which ended on a devastating anti-war note. This one is his non-fiction book about the service of the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment to which he belonged for about six long years. It covers the rest of the war after the end of "And No Birds Sang," which was one of the things that I was curious about after reading the other book. Both books gave me quite an education into Canadian WWII infantry service, something I really didn't know about before reading Mowat's book and one general Canadian history book.
For some reason, the heroic service of the Canadians in both WWI and WWII has been overlooked, at least in the U.S. memory of the war (where I have done my history training). For instance, I hadn't known that most of top WWI "Flying Aces" were Canadian, or that infantrymen in The Regiment served about 1.5 years of continuous battlefield combat. My spouse told me that the Americans learned from the soul-crushing experience of the Canadians to rotate men off the front every 90 days. Eighteen months for Mowat's Regiment versus 1.5 months for Americans. Yikes. If you read this book, you'll see it was even worse than you can imagine, but that for much of the war the men managed to create a "home" for themselves in their camaraderie anyway.
There are many very moving parts of this book, and at times his writing had me choked up or swearing at what the men went through. On the other hand, it felt that maybe at times the material was so personal and painful for him, that he had to detach himself and write in a strictly non-fiction manner. This isn't the book to read if you want an overall WWII perspective, as it is truly focused on the Canadians' experience (almost entirely in Italy) rather than looking at the European war in general. I definitely recommend it to people interested in WWII history, especially if you haven't read one from the Canadian perspective before.