To the Last Man by Lyn MacDonald
Europe was caught in the grip of a cruel winter. In Paris, where the Seine was frozen over for the first time in 120 years, people crowded into bars and cafes in search of light and warmth. Wood, when it could be found, fetched astronomical prices and, with much of the country in the industrial north overrun by the Germans, coal supplies in the fourth winter of the war were more meagre than ever and there was precious little fuel to spare for civilians. A quarter of France was in enemy hands, locked behind the wasteland where the big guns thundered and the armies of the Kaiser and the armies of the Allies lived a troglodyte existence in trenches and dugouts gouged from the freezing earth.
I don’t normally write reviews on books that I don’t care for. First the positives. The writing in this book is quite good — far beyond the 3-star rating I gave the book. That is important because there are other more acclaimed books that this historian has written that I plan on reading for my WW1 reading project. Secondly there are heaps of extended quotes contained within that are directly from British soldiers on the Western Front reflecting the soldiers' perspectives of how it went down that fateful spring of 1918. It’s not that other books are lacking quotes but this book has an unusually large number. There are also several useful maps and it is abundantly clear that the author took great pains in her research. Her description, references to and diagram of the long-range Paris Gun that the German army used to terrorize the citizens of Paris was superb.
No the reason I didn’t particularly like this book is that it bounced across 500 miles of the western front but rarely provided the necessary context and background before jumping into the soldiers' stories. In a word, I was perpetually ‘lost’ while reading this book and I didn’t particularly like the feeling. This is a confusing period in the WW1 war timeline anyway and the book was not all that helpful in clearing this up. I had to use other resources to understand what was going on.
On the Western Front, the Germans were beginning the spring offensive dubbed Operation Michael. The allies were dug in and to a large degree ’impatiently waiting’ for the promised 1,000,000 American troops to arrive in the summer of 1918. At several points the Germans nearly broke through although it is not clear how far they could have gotten. Paradoxically, it seemed that part of the non-unified German strategy of sacrificing their soldiers in 1918 was to put themselves in a better negotiation position if the additional troop strength added to the Allies materialized. The air had been let out of the German balloon by the spring of 1918 but the German army was not going to sit around, there would be tremendous death and carnage in the days ahead. Some of these sentiments were conveyed in the book but it took a lot of piecing together.
In summary this book might be better suited as a reference book because there is a great deal of original scholarship here.
3 stars.