The First World War by John Keegan

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    (Paperback - 1 VINTAGE)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0375700455
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Pub. Date: May 2000
    • Condition:
    • Attributes: First Edition

    Comments from the Seller: New York 1999 Soft Cover 1st Printing Very Good. No Jacket 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall. The First World War, a cataclysm that left ten million dead, created the modern world. Author sheds fascinating light on weaponry & technology; shows the doomed negotiations between the monarchs & ministers of 1914 from the verminous trenches of the Western front to the council-rooms of Haig, Hindenburg, & Joffre to key conflagrations from Gallipoli to East Africa to the Carpathians. Glossy pictorial soft covers, not a remainder or ex-library book, minor edge soil, no markings or dog ears, 475 bright & tight pages includes photos & maps.

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    Synopsis

    John Keegan’s The First World War is already established as the classic, single volume history of the conflict. Carefully abridged and reshaped by the author, this beautifully produced, new, large-format edition includes illustrative treatment of the military, political and historical issues of the war. Keegan gives readers a new understanding of the experience of fighting in WWI throughout the world, on land, at sea and in the air.

    Chris Barsanti

    Keegan, the best popular military historian of our time, has chronicled the four-year cataclysm of World War I with his customary mixture of incisive analysis and compassionate commentary. Sometimes it’s all too easy to forget the apocalyptic forces WWI unleashed upon the world. The patina of Europe’s civilized aristocracy was swept away by the endless killing, paving the way for the more efficient barbarism and nationalist psychoses of World War II. This is Keegan’s theme, and while not a revolutionary one, it is convincingly delivered. He dismisses many revisionist studies of the war that would have one believe “if only” this or that had happened, the war would never have been fought. As in his other work, Keegan’s ability to clearly portray the plight of the individual soldier is what carries the book. Through all the accounts of strategies and battles, he never lets us forget these are people he is writing about. He acknowledges that in WWI, unlike other wars he has written on, heroism is not remembered and only graveyards remain: “[N]o brave trumpets sound in memory for the drab millions who plodded to death on the featureless plains of Picardy and Poland; no litanies are sung for the leaders who coaxed them to slaughter.”

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    Biography

    John Keegan, the Defence Editor of The Daily Telegraph, has written several books on military history, and was for many years senior lecturer in Military History at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. He received the OBE in the Gulf War honours list, and was knighted in the Millennium honours list.

    Customer Reviews

    Generally good, but a little dryby ToddS1982

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    12/05/2009: I listen to a lot of audio books; this is the fastest narrated one I have yet heard. The speed was less than ideal for the complex subject material, which tended to the dry side with its details of military maneuvers. The book is recommended more for those who specialize in military history, especially strategy and tactics, than it is for the general public.

    Keegan is a masterby Anonymous

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    07/29/2005: The First World War does not seem to demand the attention as does the second. A book such as this puts them together in the proper context. The Great War as the precursor to the Second World War. Keegan decribes the theaters of operations, the complex personalities, and the poltics in enough detail to understand the terrible conflict. He may be the greatest living historian and this may be his most impressive work to date.


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