Considered by critics to be an accurate portrayal of frontline medical conditions, A Surgeon in Khaki is New Zealand surgeon Arthur Anderson Martin’s account of his experiences in 1914, early in World War I. Already a well-respected and widely traveled surgeon when war broke out, Martin joined the Royal Army Medical Corps. Under Field Marshal Sir John French, he served at Le Havre, Harfleur, and at the battle of the Marne. He marched to Aisne, to the new lines behind La Bassée, and finally to Flanders. During his entire service, he advocated immediate specialist surgery for the direst wounds, even under fire.
In this engaging narrative, the reader experiences the daily life of war through the eyes of the medical officers who tried valiantly to help the wounded and ill on the front lines of World War I. Martin provides colorful descriptions of the soldiers and officers, harrowing details of the battles, and riveting accounts of the difficulty of treating men in a war zone. A better firsthand account of medicine during World War I is not to be found.
Papildus informācija
A firsthand account of medicine in the field of war by one of the most respected field surgeons of World War I.
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1 | (14) |
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15 | (11) |
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III From Le Havre to the Bay of Biscay |
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26 | (10) |
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IV From the Bay of Biscay to East of Paris |
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36 | (8) |
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V The Advance to the Marne |
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44 | (9) |
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VI What I saw of the Battle of the Marne |
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53 | (6) |
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VII The Night of the Marne |
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59 | (6) |
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VIII From the Marne to the Aisne |
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65 | (19) |
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IX The Aisne and the Tragedy of the Sunken Road |
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84 | (6) |
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90 | (13) |
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XI On the Aisne at Mont de Soissons |
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103 | (21) |
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XII Field Ambulances and Military Hospitals |
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124 | (17) |
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XIII Good-bye to the Aisne |
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141 | (23) |
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XIV The La Bassee Road at Chateau Gorre |
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164 | (7) |
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171 | (31) |
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XVI Some Medical Odds and Ends |
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202 | (19) |
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221 | (10) |
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XVIII Over the Belgian Frontier |
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231 | (34) |
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265 | |
Arthur Anderson Martin (18761916) served in France and Belgium during World War I. Wounded at Flers during the Somme battle on September 17, 1916, Martin died in the base hospital that same night. Glyn Harper (Lt. Col., retired) is a professor of war studies at Massey University in New Zealand and was the commanding officer of the Military Studies Institute from 1996 to 2000. He is the author of seventeen books, most recently Images of World War One: A Photographic Record of New Zealanders at War, 19141918.