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A Salient in Flanders

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Day by day, the casualties mount …
To the literature of the Great War battlefields is added an unforgettable journey back in time: the story of the struggle for a single French village, a meticulously researched snapshot of the Western Front of April 1918. Written in a style as ruthlessly relentless as the fighting it portrays, the narrative hurls the reader directly into the eye of the storm that was Germany’s biggest-ever offensive of that war, Operation Michael, imprinting the assault vividly and indelibly upon the mind. With the British Army retreating across a ninety mile front, one point still holds firm: the village of Foncquevillers, where a single British regiment refuses to yield to a German attack by three, drawing some fifteen thousand ordinary young men into a climactic struggle for possession of a few kilometres of trench and barbed wire, the key to the outcome of the greater battle. For four days, the bloody fighting consumes all.

A Salient in Flanders is the story of this battle. On the British side, the men remain unbowed. On the German side, veterans of the campaign in Russia are thrown into repeated assault to overcome them and take their position. Here, around Foncquevillers, replacements drafted into the armies of both sides will fight their first battle alongside old sweats fighting yet one more. For many, the engagement will be their last. Yet even as all dream of home and sweethearts, the colossal German offensive gathers momentum to become an all-consuming juggernaut that brings the two sides into deadly collision within the cauldron of the trenches. None can avoid its rage and flame. As the German attack unleashes its awful power, all are thrown into a furnace of intense bombardment, frontal assault, desperate defence and brutal counter-attack. The struggle assumes an unforeseen intensity. Will any survive to taste victory?

Reader acclaim for A Salient in Flanders:

“Epic.”
“Tender and bittersweet, with a twist in the final pages that caught me unawares.”
“A devastating portrayal of war’s waste and cost, unique in its descriptions of the humanity of the individual and the frailty of the human psyche in the face of battle.”
“Real and grounded.”

237 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 23, 2022

34 people are currently reading
10 people want to read

About the author

Alan R.M. Thrush

4 books4 followers
One-time soldier, father to a London architect and a Johannesburg businesswoman, marketing consultant and educator – Alan’s wide experience of life and human nature comes through clearly in his writing. In particular, his years as an officer (decorated) with the soldiers of a black paratroop battalion in the Zimbabwe-Rhodesian conflict placed him in a unique position to pen 'Of Land and Spirits', widely recognised as the defining novel of the Southern African Bush War.

Keen observation of the after-effects of battle on former combatants led to a follow-up novel, 'A Cross for Two Graves', set in present-day Europe and Africa.

His third novel, 'A Salient in Flanders', takes readers to a different era and the trenches of WW1. It has been acclaimed as one of the most believable accounts of the Great War.

Alan's latest book, the standalone sequel to 'Salient', has just been published.

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Richard.
184 reviews30 followers
November 3, 2022
The two sides of the battle remained as divided in death as they had been in life.

This is a stunning piece of historical fiction.

The story, set in WWI, compliments the strength, weakness, courage, fear and ingenuity of all sides and all soldiers, regardless for whom they fought.

It's gritty, raw, and realistic; a deeply researched, accurate, and well-balanced work that reflects the devastation, brutality and savagery of war as well as the emotional and psychological impact on soldiers and loved ones. This is not a classic 'war story' by any means. The (often-doomed) romance between young recruits and their sweethearts is told sensitively and passionately. It's a touching and heartbreaking tale in more ways than one. Told from multiple POVs, it reaches an inexorable climax where multiple threads conjoin.

I would go so far as to say this book consumed me (I read it in 2 days). I was gripped from start to finish and felt I was in the trenches. The adrenaline rush was indescribable. During the final chapter, I had to close myself off from the outside world. I was so engrossed.

Ironies abound too: the working-class lions led by lambs (clueless public school generals); the fallacy of worthwhile sacrifice all in a 'just' cause; both armies confident of a quick victory and secure in the knowledge that theirs was the right side of the conflict.

Naivety and loss of innocence are especially evident in the young soldiers on the battlefield and in the young ladies at home who assume their men will return and be the same person who had left them, free of psychological or physical wounds.

The sense of foreboding and foreshadowing is very real, as is the feeling of the protagonists' one-step forward, two-steps-back frustration.

The pointlessness and utter futility of war is again on display for all to see. However, if you read this book, don't simply shelve it as just another tale from the trenches of one hundred years ago. We shouldn't normalise this.

What I find remiss in other reviews was labelling this as a pure 'war story'. It is as much a love story as it is one depicting the horrors of the WWI trenches. The home-front plays as crucial an element as the battlefront and offers a deeply poignant (and refreshing) perspective. The author cleverly conveys the contrast between a young soldier's unbridled delight at falling in love and the accompanying anguish at being separated from his sweetheart while fighting for survival. The longing and desire for the safe return of their men is palpable among the ladies.

A sobering tale, lest we forget, in this, Armistice week.

My thanks to NetGalley and Transition Publishing for granting this e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Ben.
1,114 reviews
January 5, 2023
I received an ARC of “ A Salient in Flanders” from Net Galley, in return for an honest review. My thanks to NG, the author and publisher for giving me an opportunity to read this fine book.
The book is historical fiction centered around a small section of trenches on the Western Front in WW1. The battle lines have been mostly stagnant since the crushing and costly failure of the Allied “ Big Push” of 1917 in which resulted in millions of casualties on both sides with little change in the front. Now, with the Revolutionary chaos in Russia that meant virtual victory for Germany, the Germans have withdrawn troops form the East for their own grand assault on the weakened British lines . It is generally successful in pushing back the British , except for a fragile stretch of trenches in Flanders- the Salient of the title. This is all fact.
Also fact is that the salient is held by the Lancaster Fusileers, one of whom is a recent draftee fresh from training named Peake. Much of the story of his experiences as hell erupts around his small section of the line.
This is a wonderfully well written book. The author fills in his main character as the reader watches Peake go from boy to man, from fumbling lover of the woman he leaves behind to a well- trained killing machine. The supporting characters also stand out . The veteran sergeant , Winterman, whom Peake had last seen back sitting on a bench back home, staring blankly as tears rolled down his cheeks, back on duty, taking control of the new men, calmly teaching them how to adapt and stay alive. The author includes vignettes of the German soldiers and their life in the trenches opposite. They are veterans of the Russian front: There is Nettleman, a stoic farm boy become man, and Goettner an an officer who leads with courage and compassion. Their feeling going into combat are laid bare as the author makes clear that the fighting men of either side have more in common than not. All are scared by the war, fatalistic and dream of home. All are loved and missed at home, which the author portrays as places where loved ones live with barely controlled fear and longing.
This is a very good book and I think a realistic one for any adult reader who can enjoy an unsparing look at a war that changed the world.
Cautions: Some roamantic scenes, it not graphic. Combat is bloodily portrayed.
Profile Image for Nero.
108 reviews6 followers
December 12, 2022
Come back to me. Christine.

I started this book thinking it would be "just" a book about the First World War, but it turned out to be so, so much more. If I had to describe this book in one word: heartbreaking.

The experience, knowledge but above all else the dedication of Alan R.M. Thrush is evident throughout the entire book. His words enchanted me in a way not all authors are capable of. The horrors and struggles of the men that fought and died on the battelefield have been honoured by the author, the sacrifice they made never forgotten.

The ending of the book has made a lasting impact, one that I will carry with me for quite some time. Heartbreaking and gutwrenching to the point where I may or may not have shed some tears, the dedication at the ending of the book causing an emotional release.
Profile Image for Dan Bechtold.
93 reviews
October 26, 2022
One of my favorite topics is historical war events and this book relives some of those moments in a heartfelt journey of those of war. The struggles of war are real as the author simple wrote about this one battle - picture many more like this as this is just a snapshot of the entire war. I highly recommend this book to those into war history.
756 reviews12 followers
December 11, 2022
A tremendous look at the horrors of the trench warfare in WW1. The story is well told, fast paced and seen from the both sides. The characters are well developed and you can find yourself caring about them. A great story

Thank you to #NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my honest opinion.
6 reviews
March 1, 2023
A great story giving both sides of the battle, with a important side story of the family’s left at home. Once into the story I couldn’t put it down, when I finished I was sad and left very thoughtful of the very brave young men and the hell they went through.
Excellent Book thanks.
1 review
July 28, 2024
A well written novel paralleling both Armies on the Western Front at the grass roots level. Of course it was obvious that the players would meet eventually, I did enjoy the way the author did it.
Not a happy time in our history
Profile Image for Review  Board.
24 reviews3 followers
July 22, 2023
An epic journey

A Salient in Flanders is a devastatingly accurate portrait of the Western Front of WW1, or the Great War, in 1918. Described in vivid and gruesome detail the book takes readers inside the minds of the men involved in the battle at Foncquevillers, a small village that becomes the epicenter of both assault and defense between the British and German armies. While dreams of home become more and more impossible to reach, the soldiers at Foncquevillers - on both sides of the war - take physical and psychological hits from the strain of staying alive to fight another day.

Author Alan R.M. Thrush’s prior military experience is evident in every page of A Salient in Flanders. Not only in the descriptions of the sounds and sights of battle, but the personal anecdotes and stories of individuals, and the war that rages on both on the field and in their hearts. The book will leave you not only more aware of the events that took place at this confrontation, but of the thoughts and feelings of many a soldier sent to die for his country.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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