WilliamRev Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 [standing up, staring at the floor] My name is William, and I am a Great War diary/memoir addict. Over the last 18 months I have read (or in several cases have bought and am about to read) the following British Great War diaries or memoirs, in just the random order they appear on my bookshelf: Sidney Rogerson: "Twelve Days on the Somme" Robert Graves: "Goodbye to All That" Charles Carrington: "Soldier from the War Returning" Charles Carrington alias Charles Edmonds: "A Subaltern's War" Frank Richards: "Old Soldiers Never Die" Charles Douie: "The Weary Road" John Bickersteth: "The Bickersteth Diaries 1914-19" John Glubb: "Into Battle" Bernard Martin: "Poor Bloody Infantry" G. Greenwell: "Infant in Arms" Max Plowman: "A Subaltern on the Somme" Cameron Stewart: "An Unimportant Officer" J.C. Dunn: "The War the Infantry Knew" John Reith: "Wearing Spurs" Edmund Blundon: "Undertones of War" Norman Collins: "Last Man Standing" F.E. Noakes: "The Distant Drum" Edwin Campion Vaughan: "Some Desperate Glory" S. Sassoon: "Memoirs of an Infantry Officer" Len Smith: "Drawing Fire" I am beyond a cure, so can the group help me to feed my habit by recommending other similar books. British, first-person diaries and memoirs please, written during or as near to the Great War as possible. Please? [starts shaking - withdrawal symptoms are already close if help doesn't arrive soon in the shape of your recommendations...] Please.... William Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gilbo139 Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 Just read and can't understand why I've only just got round to it......Storm of Steel. Ernst Jungar........good read and from another perspective..........cheers Colin P S nice list of years I've taken a couple of titles from it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Admin kenf48 Posted 21 January , 2013 Admin Share Posted 21 January , 2013 On my bookshelf next to Bickersteth and Blunden I have George Coppard 'With a machine gun to Cambrai' which is a notable omission from your list, (oh...oh just revealed my OCD). To really feed your habit, and if you don't want to restrict yourself to British titles you might get hold of Cyril Fall's 'War Books - a critical guide' (1930) which is an annotated bibliography of 728 titles of not only British but also American French, German and Italian writers. (Incidentally published at the height of the 'War Books Controversy'). Soin addition to your list that's 708 (+ George) to go - best get down to Specsavers! Ken Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobL Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 Joseph Murray - 'Gallipoli as I saw it' Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Philip Wilson Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 Mountains of Moab - The Diary of a Yeoman 1908-19, including Gallipoli and Palestine during the Great War by E.Victor GODRICH edited and published by his son Dr.John GODRICH in 2011. E.V.GODRICH served with the Queen's Own Worcestershire Hussars. Well worth reading. Philip Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
paulgranger Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 The Gambardier - 'Mark Severn' (Frank Lushington) Field Guns in France - Neil Fraser-Tytler A Frenchman in Khaki - Paul Maze War Letters to a Wife - Rowland Feilding Mud and Khaki - H S Clapham As From Kemmel Hill - Arthur Behrend Warrior - Graham Seton-Hutchison Footslogger- same author A Brasshat in No Mans Land - Frank Crozier Up to Mametz L Wynn Griffith The Somme - Norman Gladden Across The Piave - same author The Weary Road - Charles Douie The Master of Belhaven War Diaries A Passionate Prodigality - Guy Chapman Stand To! - F C Hitchock General Jack's Diaries - ed. John Terraine Blimey, there's quite a few, aren't there? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobL Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 I'd like to second 'Field Guns in France'. Superb! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rose of picardy Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 (edited) Stuart Cloete- A Victorian Son ( noone ever talks about this, but I liked it. Very opinionated). Vera Brittain-Testament of Youth (everyone knows about this and it sparked my interest in the War) Frances Farmborough-With the Armies of the Tsar Edited 21 January , 2013 by rose of picardy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Black Maria Posted 21 January , 2013 Share Posted 21 January , 2013 A few old classics that have been reprinted are= And all for what?,Cuddeford Haunting years,Andrews Over the top,Lambert 22 months under fire,Page-Croft Slaves of the War Lords,Russell There's a Devil in the Drum,Lucy Nothing of Importance,Adams A Generation Missing,Carstairs Four Years on the Western front,"A Rifleman"(A.Smith) Somme Harvest,Eyre And some quite recent classics = A Kitchener Man's Bit ,Dennis Of those we Loved,Read(soon to be reprinted) A Sergeant-Major's War,Shephard Joffrey's War,Bourne,Bushaway The Burgoyne Diaries A life Apart,Thomas The Ebb and Flow of Battle and In the Cannon's mouth,Campbell The Unreturning Army,Gordon The Diary of an Unprofessional Soldier,Nash and two of my favourite recent books are,Hell on Earth(Burder) and 30 odd feet below Belgium (Stockwin). There are so many classic memoirs that deserve to be reprinted, such as,The Land-Locked Lake,Hanbury-Sparrow, The Winding Road Unfolds,Hope, Other Ranks,Tilsley. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dawson Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 Time to leave the ploughshares. William Carr Is one of my favourite books. And is well worth seeking out. My collection must number a thousand now. And my all time favourite with the above, is Some Desperate Glory. Regards, Ian Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rflory Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 Some autobiographies of Royal Artillery officers which I don't think have been mentioned: Diary of the Retirement from Mons August 1914 by Capt. H. B. Bartram, RHA, 1915 Gun Fodder: The Diary of Four Years of War by Major A. Hamilton Gibbs, 1919 A Memoir of Lt.-Col. Edward Anthony Steel, DSO, RHA and RFA by Col. J. P. Steel, RE, 1921 A Two Years Interlude France 1916-1918 by Major R. A Wilson, DSO, RGA Palestine Memories 1917-1918-1925 by Lieut. Robert H. Goodsall, RFA (TF), 1925 Memoirs of the Great War, Lt. Col. H. M. Davson, CMG, DSO Pushed and the Return Push by 'Quex' (Capt. G H F Nichols, RFA), 1919 With the British Guns in Italy by Lieut. Hugh Dalton, RGA, 1919 Three Years in France with the Guns by C. A. Rose, 1919 A Gunner's Crusade: The Campaign in the Desert, Palestine & Syria by Antony Bluett War as a Temporary Occupation: First World War Memoirs of a Second Lieutenant by Lieut. Frank Walter Paish, MC, RFA Echo of the Guns: Recollections of an Artillery Officer 1914-18 by Harry Siepmann Gunner Subalteran 1914-1918 by Julian Tyndale-Biscoe An Artillery Officer in the First World War by Colonel R. Macleod, DSO, MC, RAF The Memoirs of Dennis Wheatley: Officer and Temporary Gentleman by Dennis Wheatley Memoirs of an Artillery Officer 1915-1918 by Major Ynyr Probert, RFA Dick Flory Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barkalotloudly Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 Some i would recommend Salute of Guns ..boyd Surgery on tresles ....{excellent }..begg To the last ridge ..Downing Ghosts have warm Hands Bird Journal of Private Frazier Soul of the camp Grey battalion Dinki Di Nurse there are loads more but these spring to mind Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seaJane Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 Bruce Bairnsfather's "Bullets and Billets" is one that I have which doesn't seem to have been mentioned yet. I also have, and can recommend, May Wedderburn Cannan's "Grey Ghosts and Voices" - one of the few books ever to have made me cry. Her earlier volume, "The Lonely Generation", I haven't read. For information on her: http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Wcannan.htm Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobL Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 Some autobiographies of Royal Artillery officers which I don't think have been mentioned: Diary of the Retirement from Mons August 1914 by Capt. H. B. Bartram, RHA, 1915 Gun Fodder: The Diary of Four Years of War by Major A. Hamilton Gibbs, 1919 A Memoir of Lt.-Col. Edward Anthony Steel, DSO, RHA and RFA by Col. J. P. Steel, RE, 1921 A Two Years Interlude France 1916-1918 by Major R. A Wilson, DSO, RGA Palestine Memories 1917-1918-1925 by Lieut. Robert H. Goodsall, RFA (TF), 1925 Memoirs of the Great War, Lt. Col. H. M. Davson, CMG, DSO Pushed and the Return Push by 'Quex' (Capt. G H F Nichols, RFA), 1919 With the British Guns in Italy by Lieut. Hugh Dalton, RGA, 1919 Three Years in France with the Guns by C. A. Rose, 1919 A Gunner's Crusade: The Campaign in the Desert, Palestine & Syria by Antony Bluett War as a Temporary Occupation: First World War Memoirs of a Second Lieutenant by Lieut. Frank Walter Paish, MC, RFA Echo of the Guns: Recollections of an Artillery Officer 1914-18 by Harry Siepmann Gunner Subalteran 1914-1918 by Julian Tyndale-Biscoe An Artillery Officer in the First World War by Colonel R. Macleod, DSO, MC, RAF The Memoirs of Dennis Wheatley: Officer and Temporary Gentleman by Dennis Wheatley Memoirs of an Artillery Officer 1915-1918 by Major Ynyr Probert, RFA Dick Flory Dick, aside from 'A Gunners's Crusade' which I have a copy of, are there any artillery books that cover the non-western front theatre? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Martin Bennitt Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 Two free to download: On the Right of the British Line - Captain Gilbert Nobbs Ladies from Hell - Douglas Pinkerton cheers Martin B Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aengland Posted 22 January , 2013 Share Posted 22 January , 2013 'A Passionate Prodigality' by Guy Chapman.... a great read Andrew Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WilliamRev Posted 24 January , 2013 Author Share Posted 24 January , 2013 I'm loving all these suggestions, giving me ample scope to feed my addiction. Many thanks! At present I am just interested in the Western Front (although I feel a weird Gallipoli craving coming on), and have investigated a number of the books recommended above: I have found four that are available cheaply, new or second-hand on Amazon, and which I have ordered (using the GWF fund-raising Amazon link of course). William Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenneth505 Posted 26 January , 2013 Share Posted 26 January , 2013 don't forget Middle parts of Fortune - Her majesties Soldiers We. Or that French fellow that reminds one of Proust... Are there new first person naratives coming home that aren't written for HBO? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marilyne Posted 3 February , 2013 Share Posted 3 February , 2013 Dear William, with the greastest regard to your terrible condition, I fear that you are beyond any help !! But is is very well known that to stop an addiction just like that, from one day to another, might lead to very bad withdrawal symptons, so in order to avoid this, I'll prescribe you a very short list of additional memoirs. Small amounts might help !! Patrick Mc Gill: "The Great Push" Frank Dunham: "The Long Carry" Harold Daerden: "Medicine and Duty" Gavin Royon, Editor: "Massacre of the innocents: The Crofton diaries, Ypres 1914-1915" Gen. Jack Seely: "Warrior - the amazing story of a real war horse" (absolutely amazing book !!! - and it doesn't really count as memoir, it's about a horse!! ) and in case you can read French: Louis Barthas: "les Carnets de guerre de Louis Barthas, tonnelier" Paul Tuffrau! 1914-1918: "Quatre années sur le front. Carnets d'un combattant". Daniel Mornet: "Tranchées de Verdun" Louis Maufrai: "J'étais médecin dans les tranchées" Good luck!! Marilyne Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marilyne Posted 3 February , 2013 Share Posted 3 February , 2013 I also recommend that you read Pierre Chaine's "Mémoires d'un rat". it's about Ferdinand, old trench rat. I do hope it's available in english .. not so sure. Henri Barbusse "Le Feu - journal d'une escouade" is certainly available in English. It's mostly listed as novel, although inspired by Barbusse's stint on the front. also very interesting is Stefan Zweig's "Die Welt von Gestern", also available in english. It's Zweig's view on the end of the 9th century, society as it was at that time and the world of illusions that was shattered by the coming of the war. MM. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tipperary Posted 3 February , 2013 Share Posted 3 February , 2013 Patrick Mc Gill's Red Horizon Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenneth505 Posted 4 February , 2013 Share Posted 4 February , 2013 Henri Barbusse "Le Feu - journal d'une escouade" That's the one that reminds me of Proust. It was in wide circulation well before the end of the war. Copies are easily found online. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mary Kemp Posted 23 February , 2013 Share Posted 23 February , 2013 Go to Internet Archive and download all the amazing books of POW's. Two of my favourites are Comrades in Captivity by FW Harvey and Prisoner of War by Andre Warnod. Enjoy.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stiletto_33853 Posted 23 February , 2013 Share Posted 23 February , 2013 The Anger of the Guns by John Nettleton Villiers-Stuart goes to war, by R.M. Maxwell Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rflory Posted 23 February , 2013 Share Posted 23 February , 2013 RobL wrote: Dick, aside from 'A Gunners's Crusade' which I have a copy of, are there any artillery books that cover the non-western front theatre? Rob: Three books cover artillery actions in areas other than the Western Front: Palestine Memories 1917-1918-1925 by Lieut. Robert H. Goodsall, RFA (TF), 1925 [Palestine] Gunner Subaltern 1914-1918 by Julian Tyndale-Biscoe, 1971 [ireland, 1917; Egypt and Palestine, 1917-1918] Amateur Gunners: The Adventures of an Amateur Soldier in France, Salonica and Palestine in the Royal Field Artillery by A Douglas Thorburn (former Captain, RFA SR). Regards, Dick Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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