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Unreturning Army [Mīkstie vāki]

4.42/5 (93 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 198x127x15 mm, weight: 179 g, 8 pp B & W photos; line drawings/maps
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Jun-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Bantam Books (Transworld Publishers a division of the Random House Group)
  • ISBN-10: 085750195X
  • ISBN-13: 9780857501950
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 14,69 €*
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 256 pages, height x width x depth: 198x127x15 mm, weight: 179 g, 8 pp B & W photos; line drawings/maps
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Jun-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Bantam Books (Transworld Publishers a division of the Random House Group)
  • ISBN-10: 085750195X
  • ISBN-13: 9780857501950
As the summer of 1914 drew to a close, it was difficult for a 16 year-old schoolboy to realize that the world for which he had been prepared at Clifton College was itself preparing for war. By 1916, he was commissioned in the Royal Field Artillery. This book gives human account of history.

In the centenary year of World War I, names such as Ypres, the Marne, the Somme, and Passchendaele are heavy with meaning as settings for the near-destruction of a generation of men. It is this aura of tragedy that makes Huntly Gordon’s memoir, drawn from his letters written from the Front, such a potent one. He was sensitive, intelligent, unpretentious, and, as his account reveals, capable of detached and trenchant judgment. As the summer of 1914 drew to a close, it was difficult for a 16 year-old schoolboy to realize that the world for which he had been prepared at Clifton College was itself preparing for war. By 1916, he was commissioned in the Royal Field Artillery. By June 1917, he was at the Ypres Salient, getting his "baptism" at Hell Fire Corner in an intensive artillery duel that formed the prolog to Passchendaele itself. Early in 1918, his battery would fight a series of rearguard actions near Baupaume that would help turn the tide of the massive German Spring offensive. Huntly Gordon has given us an enduring and classic memoir: a poignant and extraordinarily human account of history as it happened.


A classic account of one man's experiences on the Western Front, now republished in a revised and expanded edition in anticipation of the centenary of the First World War.
Nearly 100 years have passed since the guns blazed in the ever-deepening mud of Passchendaele. Yet places such as Ypres, the Marne and the Somme can never remain mere names in a chronicle of war -- they are heavy with meaning as the setting for the near-destruction of a generation of men. It is this aura of tragedy that makes Huntly Gordon's book -- consisting mainly of his own letters written home from the front - such a potent memoir. Gordon was a typical product of his generation -- sensitive, intelligent, unpretentious; capable of detached, trenchant and reasoned judgement. As the glorious summer of 1914 drew to a close, it was difficult for the 16 year-old Gordon to realize that the world he had planned and prepared for at Clifton College was a world in which he now had to prepare for war. By 1916 he had left school, and after an intensive and ill-balanced course at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant, Royal Field Artillery. In June 1917, he was at the Ypres Salient, getting his 'baptism' at Hell Fire Corner in one of those intensive artillery duels that formed the prologue to Passchendaele in July 1917 before being engaged for six weeks in the havoc of the battle itself. In the opening months of 1918, his battery was to fight a series of rearguard actions near Baupaume during the brutal German offensive of March 21. A transfer to a quiet sector to rest and refit was eventually possible, but they arrived there just in time to face the final German onslaught of April 12.
In The Unreturning Army Huntly Gordon recalls his experiences of a tumultuous conflict and field of battle that seem almost inconceivable to us now. And his words, for the most part written at the time, have an immediacy, freshness and poignancy that will not fail to enlighten and astonish and move the reader of today.

Recenzijas

One of the best First World War memoirs I've read - honest, intelligent and vivid, as fresh as if written yesterday. -- ALLAN MALLINSON * The Times * One of the best half-dozen memoirs . . . Your father writes beautfiully, had an interesting war and emerges as a man who did his bit without being overwhelmed by the horror or elated by the dark beauty of violence -- RICHARD HOLMES, author of Redcoat, Tommy etc. I have never read anything that gives such a vivid description of the hell of Passchendaele - nor of the spirit that enabled our troops to survive it. -- PROFESSOR SIR MICHAEL HOWARD A haunting account of the loss of a generation * Good Book Guide, Jan 2014 *

Papildus informācija

Offering an alternative perspective on the Great War to the sweeping overviews of Max Hastings or Margaret Macmillan, a classic memoir of one soldier's experiences on the Western Front...
Preface 9(4)
Foreword to the 1967 Edition 13(4)
1 A Sprig of Heather
17(19)
2 Kitchener Wants YOU!
36(18)
3 Life at the Wagon-Lines
54(12)
4 Death on Hill 60
66(11)
5 Feeding the Guns
77(17)
6 Overture to Passchendaele
94(15)
7 Zero Hour and After
109(12)
8 Hell-Fire Corner
121(13)
9 In Sight of Passchendaele
134(9)
10 Pastorale
143(22)
11 Deep Winter at Bapaume
165(7)
12 Waiting
172(12)
13 `Fight on to the End'
184(33)
Postscript 217(12)
Afterword 229(6)
Photo Acknowledgements 235
Huntly Strathearn Gordon was born in Perthshire in 1898. Educated at Clifton College, he joined the army in 1916. After the war he studied medicine before going to China with Shell Oil. Returning in 1926, he joined London Transport, spending much of his spare time surveying archaeological sites with Sir Mortimer Wheeler. During the Blitz, he initiated food trains for the thousands sheltering in the Underground, and was awarded an MBE. Huntly Gordon died in 1982. Born in 1956, David Gordon is Huntly Gordon's youngest son. Educated at Sherborne and Sandhurst, he has been a soldier, parliamentary researcher and county councillor. A lifelong campaigner on environmental issues, his passions also include vintage vehicles and old houses. He lives in Somerset.