The Western Front, both this book and the TV Documentary it accompanied, shows the late author/history presenter Richard Holmes at his best- explaining a fairly complex subject to the lay person in a straightforward and simple way. The topic is the main action of WWI- the Western Front in France and Belgium. Dividing the book and the documentary into Making the front, Feeding the Front, Holding the Front, commanding the Front, Enduring the front, and finally Breaking the Front, Holmes gives the reader/viewer an amazingly complete understanding of the pertinent issues that dominated WWI. Mentally- Senior European Officers had trouble conceiving of the scale of the new armies- and of the ranges and effects of the new smokeless powder, bolt action magazine rifles, fast firing pneumatic recoil artillery pieces and especially of course the Maxim Machine Gun that would come to truly dominate the battlefields. Once people started digging trenches to improve defensive positions- the "Front" from the Swiss border to the Belgian Coast did not take long. Then both sides would slog away at each other until the mobility returned in 1918 as combatants finally developed effective tactics for offensives against defense in depth. Holmes is there at every turn to explain why decisions were made at the time-some that seem counterproductive to the modern eye.
The Germans, after heinous losses in the first moves of the war, seem to understand the new realities quicker- making and distributing many more Maxim Guns first, developing trench systems in depth, adding concrete bunkers, issuing grenades, and moving to Steel helmets, all moves the allies would adopt months later. But the Germans are also being strangled by the British Naval Blockade, even after they push Russia out of the war in 1917. The Allies are learning too- and they have their own empires for troops and resources- and a whole other empire. the American one, that they can entice into the war and use as an offshore "arsenal of Democracy" to use a phrase from a later war. The Allies need to survive 1917 (Enduring the Front) and then endure a last spasm of German offensives in early 1918- drives that took lots of acreage -but did not break the alliance, the front, or the will of the allied voters. When the allies went back over to the attack after the Kaiser's Army was spent- they were finally able to break and exploit- and the Germans sued for peace. All along Holmes is a clear narrator- always with a ready way to explain how the best of intentions led to 4 years of too much muddy stalemate.
There are adult themes and some graphic violent passages, but all well handled, so I think a Junior Reader over about 12/13 should be able to handle this book - especially a good accompaniment to watching the Documentary. For the Gamer/Modeler/Military enthusiast -this is a bit of a mixed result. The Gamer is really getting background information- for those who might be playing Flames Of War Great War, Bolt Action, Chain of Command or other era games, as the pictures and maps/diagrams are really not specific enough. The Modeler does get a lot of B/w pics and some interesting diorama ideas- but this is still more a background research book. The Military enthusiast get a lot here though. Few historians can explain a military meatgrinder as clearly and as simply as Holmes and still allow you to see the leaders as people and not monsters. With the careful guidance of a true master- the reader can see how stalemate and industrial volume death was an unintended consequence of military and political decisions made before the war and in its early stages. I recommend this Book and Documentary Series to anyone interested in WWI or the Western Front in particular, whether they are a Military History buff-or a more general reader.