A Bigger Field Awaits Us: The Scottish Football Team That Fought the Great War
By (Author) Andrew Beaujon
Chicago Review Press
Chicago Review Press
7th August 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
European history
History of sport
Association football (Soccer)
796.33464094134
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 27mm
576g
Each November, about a hundred people with paper poppies pinned to their coats gather around a memorial in Edinburgh. They're there to commemorate themore than a dozen members of the local football team, Heart of Midlothianalmost every member of its starting lineup and many of its backup playerswho went to war. When they enlisted in November 1914, the Edinburgh Evening Newsran pages of splendid photos of the Hearts players in McCrae's Battalion. After the war, surviving soldiers, many of them wounded, gassed, and suffering from what was then called shell shock, returned home to a public that had only the weakest grasp of what had happened. Perhaps the pointlessness of so much suffering and death was too awful to contemplate. All of Edinburgh threw a parade for the men of McCraes Battalion when they marched off to war, but no one wanted to be reminded that their commanders later traded their lives and health for a few yards of French mud.
A Bigger Field Awaits Us: The Scottish Football Team That Fought the Great Wartells the little-known but poignant story of a group of Scottish athletes and their fans who went to war togetherand the stories of the few who made it home. The saga of McCraes Battalion brings much-needed human scale to World War I and explains why a group of young men from a small country with almost no direct connection to the conflict would give up their careers, their homes, their health, and in many cases their lives to an abstract cause. Their sacrifices illuminate the dark corners of this war that historys lights rarely reach.
"A wonderful, unexpected book."--World War One Illustrated
"It's always been popular to compare sports to war. In A Bigger Field Awaits Us, the always clever Andrew Beaujon illustrates why that metaphor is mostly flawed but sometimes perfect."--Chuck Klosterman, author of But What If We're Wrong
Andrew Beaujon is a senior editor at Washingtonian magazine in Washington, DC. He also has worked as a music critic for Spin, a recipe editor for Martha Stewart Living, and as the managing editor of Washington City Paper, and is the author of Body Piercing Saved My Life.