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Some Desperate Glory


Ajaxer

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by Max Egremont, biographer of Sassoon.

My copy has just arrived and it looks terrific.

Good discount on £20 price on Amazon.

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Some Desperate Glory. The Diary of A Young Officer, 1917

Commissioned to Royal Warwickshire Regt. and posted to 1/8 in January 1917

Terry

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I think the book referred to is not the Edwin Campion Vaughan volume, but this -

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Some-Desperate-Glory-First-World-ebook/dp/B00IXLVUDY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1399580109&sr=8-1&keywords=some+desperate+glory

"After his highly successful history of Prussia, the authorized biographer of Siegfried Sassoon examines the First World War through the lives of the poets who fought at the front. 2014 marks the hundredth anniversary of the outbreak of what many believed would be the war to end all wars. And while the First World War devastated Europe, it inspired profound poetry – words in which the atmosphere and landscape of battle are evoked perhaps more vividly than anywhere else.

The poets – many of whom were killed – show not only the war’s tragedy but the hopes and disappointments of a generation of men. In Some Desperate Glory, historian and biographer Max Egremont gives us a transfiguring look at the life and work of this assemblage of poets. Wilfred Owen with his flaring genius; the intense, compassionate Siegfried Sassoon; the composer Ivor Gurney; Robert Graves who would later spurn his war poems; the nature-loving Edward Thomas; the glamorous Fabian Socialist Rupert Brooke; and the shell-shocked Robert Nichols all fought in the war, and their poetry is a bold act of creativity in the face of unprecedented destruction.

Some Desperate Glory will include a chronological anthology of their poems, with linking commentary, telling the story of the war through their art. This unique volume unites the poetry and the history of the war, so often treated separately, granting readers the pride, strife, and sorrow of the individual soldier’s experience coupled with a panoramic view of the war’s toll on an entire nation."

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