Great War (1914-1918): The Society and Culture of the First World War discussion
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Alan
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Apr 04, 2016 03:40PM

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My book the 'Assassins' is currently on sale for 99p for the next four days.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Assassins-Ala...

With The Flying Squadron: The War Letters of Harold Rosher

My book is "None of Us the Same"


[Since posting this, None of Us the Same was awarded an indieB.R.A.G. Medallion, named a 2017 Book of the Year Finalist in Historical Fiction by the Independent Author Network and given a "Discovering Diamonds" review.]

How great to see this group! My latest two novels take place during WW1 and so I've developed an addiction to that era through my research. You might want to check out m..."
Uncomfortable plugging my own books, so will keep this short. My book, None of Us the Same, came out in May. Main character is a highly opinionated and guilt-ridden working class nurse from Dublin. Getting very strong reviews, so not hesitant to recommend. First vol of a trilogy, with second book out before Christmas.


They Shall Not Pass: The French Army on the Western Front 1914-1918

Synopsis:
This graphic collection of first-hand accounts sheds new light on the experiences of the French army during the Great War. It reveals in authentic detail the perceptions and emotions of soldiers and civilians who were caught up in the most destructive conflict the world had ever seen.

1) The Somme by Gary Sheffield is a small book. How can those 150 pages tell anything new after a dozen Somme titles under your belt ?
2) I enjoyed Kendall's Neuve Chapelle book immensely, but the editor for this one should be drawn and quartered. In a book of regular one-hand size rather than A3, the text is printed in two columns per page.




Good War, Great Men.: 313th Machine Gun Battalion of World War I
I appreciate the interest you all have in the Great War, and I would humbly ask you to check out my new book called "Good War, Great Men." I reduced the Kindle price to $0.99 in hopes that the members of this group would consider reading the book and giving me feedback on the writing as well as the events found within the pages. I've researched this one battalion for over 10 years. The writings of these men just had to be made available for others to read. I truly hope you enjoy their prose as much as I enjoyed researching their stories.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Andrew Capets




Good War, Great Men.: 313th Machine Gun Battalion of World War I
I appreciate the interest you ..."
Just downloaded it and looking forward to reading. Happy Thanksgiving! Sep



Good War, Great Men.: 313th Machine Gun Battalion of World War I
I appreciate th..."
Thank you Sep! I hope you enjoy it. I will surely give Thanks today.

Thanks Terry, my pleasure. Enjoy your Thanksgiving as well.

Soldiers’ Songs and Slang of the Great War

The Great War and Modern Memory

Poilu: The World War I Notebooks of Corporal Louis Barthas, Barrelmaker, 1914-1918

Good War, Great Men.: 313th Machine Gun Battalion of World War I I believe this book has a give-away right now too. (Yes, I know I am very behind on all your other suggestions.)

1) Sopwith Camel Fighter Ace by Robert M. (Bob) Todd

Todd, an American, served with one of the American pursuit units on the Western Front during the Summer of 1918 that flew under British command. Hence, the unit's complement of Sopwith Camels.
2) Wind in the Wires and an Escaper's Log: A British Pilot's Classic Memoir of Aerial Combat, Captivity and Escape During the Great War by Duncan Grinnell-Milne

3) An Explorer in the Air Service by Hiram Bingham

"AN EXPLORER IN THE AIR SERVICE" (which was originally published in 1920 by Yale University Press) is Hiram Bingham's account of his time as an officer in the United States Army Air Service (1917-1919) in which he headed, first in Washington the Personnel Office of the Air Service - and then was sent to France in the Spring of 1918 as Chief of Personnel at Tours, where he labored for a few months before he managed to wrangle a transfer to Issoudun, where the U.S. had established a complex of military airfields 100 miles SE of Paris. Bingham, who had undergone flight training in the U.S. in March 1917 prior to the country's entry into the war and went on to earn the designation of Reserve Military Aviator (R.M.A.) the following August, wanted to freshen up on his flying skills. His work as Air Service Personnel Chief was so all-consuming that he had had no time for flying.
From reading this book, one quickly sees how much of an aviation enthusiast Bingham was. (Indeed, before joining the U.S. Army, he was one of the persons instrumental in the establishment of the U.S. Schools of Military Aeronautics at 8 universities across the country - from Cornell to UC/Berkeley - which provided ground school training for Army aviation cadets, who later received advanced flight training in Europe.) At Issoudun, he was placed in command of the Third Aviation Instructional Centre (AIC). The Third AIC was the largest primary instruction and pursuit training school in the Air Service. It was made up of a series of airfields where pilot trainees were put through various stages of training, from simplest (Field 1, where the trainee pilot learned to taxi a 'wingless' plane at high speed along a straight course, so as to get a basic feel for handling a plane) to advanced (Fields 7 & 8, where formation flying, simulated aerial combat, and gunnery were taught).




This is a book that has a deep, personal resonance because my maternal grandfather (who was born in 1895; he passed away when I was in elementary school) had been a corporal in the U.S. Army and had served in France during 1918. Sadly, the experiences of African American soldiers in World War I is a subject that is little remarked upon in a lot of histories about the war. Books like this one help to redress the imbalance.

I'm sure they do appreciate it. I know that when To Conquer Hell: The Meuse-Argonne, 1918 came out, the author contacted my cousin because the book includes a cite/story about my great-uncle who died there. And she appreciated that and told some of her cousins, including me.




The second volume in my trilogy was released 30 November, too.

Can I add my own book “Flowers of the Forest” , the story of my great uncle, Pte Farquhar McLennan as he trains and goes to war in The Ypres Salient.

Todd, an American, was studying engineering at the University of Cincinnati, when he joined the U.S. Army's Aviation Service in the summer of 1917. A year later, after completing flight training in Canada, the U.S., and Britain, he was in France flying Sopwith Camels (a British built fighter plane) in combat with the 17th Aero Squadron of the U.S. Army Air Service (USAS).
This is Todd's story, told from his personal recollections 60 years later and from his letters he wrote to family and friends during his military service.





My book 'The Assassins' has just been published by Endeavour Press as a Kindle book. It's historical fiction and is about the assassination of Archduke F..."
Hi Dimitri
The Assassins is out now in paperback, http://bit.ly/ABardosTheAssassins
Cheers
Alan

R.J. MacDonald
Hello, and greetings from Scotland. I published my first WWI historical novel a year ago, since then its won three awards. Just looking through the novels posted on this thread, I'm really looking forward to linking up with authors who have covered this period in history.
Regards, Mac

Jeffrey, My first book touches on Nova Scotia, Ireland, Scotland and Gallipoli- we might have a lot of research in common!


Those works would have been printed and available to soldiers, which I've never thought about. I've always considered them as post-war, but they weren't. How widely the poems were read at the time I don't know- some of them would have been undoubtedly considered un-patriotic and might have only found an audience once the conflict was over.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Distant Field: A Novel of World War I (other topics)The Assassins (other topics)
Paths of Glory: The French Army 1914-18 (other topics)
Loos 1915: The Unwanted Battle (other topics)
Sopwith Camel Fighter Ace (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
R.J. MacDonald (other topics)Anthony Clayton (other topics)
Gordon Corrigan (other topics)
Robert M. (Bob) Todd (other topics)
Andrew Rawson (other topics)
More...