All Quiet on the Home Front: Life in Britain During the First World War
By (Author) Steve Humphries
By (author) Richard Van Emden
By (author) Richard Van Emden
Headline Publishing Group
Headline Book Publishing
7th May 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
First World War
European history
Oral history
Social and cultural history
941.083
320
Width 156mm, Height 236mm
The truth about the sacrifice and suffering on the home front in Britain during the First World War has never been told.
In this book some of the oldest men and women in the country speak for the first time about experiences and events that have remained buried for 85 years. Their testimony shows the same candour and courage we have become accustomed to hear from veterans of the western front.Those interviewed will include a survivor of a Zeppelin raid on Hull in 1915, a Welsh munitions worker recruited as a girl and a woman rescued from a bombed school after five days. There are also accounts of rural famine, bereavement and the effects on families back home, and even the story of a woman who planned to kill her family to save them further suffering.An important reminder of the emotional and psychological impact of war by the people who were there. - Guardian
A classic piece of oral history bulging with facts that you kept feeling you should have known or guessed already - but which came as revelations all the same. - Daily TelegraphIt is softly spoken, shocking and unfamiliar. - The TimesSteve Humphries is a programme maker renowned for his landmark oral history series and their accompanying books. Richard van Emden is a writer and television researcher specialising in the First World War.