A Month at the Front: The Diary of an Unknown Soldier

Bodleian Library
4
49 ratings 3 reviews
From The Things They Carried and Platoon to today’s documentaries of soldiers fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, the ordeals of wartime soldiers are gripping, morally complex narratives of human strength and frailty. A Month at the Front offers another fresh and personal perspective on war. Recently acquired by the Bodleian Library, it is a first-hand account of a young and anonymous British soldier fighting in the frontline trenches of the First World War. A Month at the Front chronicles one month in the life of a soldier from the 12th East Surrey regiment, and the economical yet powerful narrative vividly brings to life the sights, sounds, and horrors of war. “The first night passed uneventfully, except that we were shelled”—so begins the young man in spare prose, and the quiet drama unfolds from there. Constant bombings and the sobering landscape of war—“It was nothing unusual to come across . . . a dead comrade lying waiting for burial”—are occasionally relieved by humorous events such as the discovery that a troop of advancing Germans was “nothing more than few short willow shrubs waving about in the breeze.” The young soldier describes how his comrades gradually fall one by one, until he and three remaining fellow soldiers are captured by the enemy, an event that abruptly ends the narrative. A Month at the Front  is not penned by a famous author, nor does it claim to offer any broad perspective. Rather, it is the lone voice of an unknown young man thrust into fatal circumstances.
Genres: HistoryNonfictionWar
64 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
11 (22%)
4 star
29 (59%)
3 star
8 (16%)
2 star
0 (0%)
1 star
1 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Bodleian Library

Lists with this book

Letters from Kimberley: Eyewitness Accounts from the South African War
The Battle Of Spioenkop: 23-24 January 1900
The Battle Of Colenso: 15 December 1899
Bibliotheek vader 9
100 books • 1 voters