Catastrophe: Europe Goes to War 1914
By (Author) Max Hastings
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
19th May 2014
8th May 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
940.3
Paperback
672
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 43mm
520g
The Amazon History Book of the Year 2013 is a magisterial chronicle of the calamity that befell Europe in 1914 as the continent shifted from the glamour of the Edwardian era to the tragedy of total war.
In 1914, Europe plunged into the 20th centurys first terrible act of self-immolation - what was then called The Great War. On the eve of its centenary, Max Hastings seeks to explain both how the conflict came about and what befell millions of men and women during the first months of strife.
He finds the evidence overwhelming, that Austria and Germany must accept principal blame for the outbreak. While what followed was a vast tragedy, he argues passionately against the poets view, that the war was not worth winning. It was vital to the freedom of Europe, he says, that the Kaisers Germany should be defeated.
His narrative of the early battles will astonish those whose images of the war are simply of mud, wire, trenches and steel helmets. Hastings describes how the French Army marched into action amid virgin rural landscapes, in uniforms of red and blue, led by mounted officers, with flags flying and bands playing. The bloodiest day of the entire Western war fell on 22 August 1914, when the French lost 27,000 dead. Four days later, at Le Cateau the British fought an extraordinary action against the oncoming Germans, one of the last of its kind in history. In October, at terrible cost they held the allied line against massive German assaults in the first battle of Ypres.The author also describes the brutal struggles in Serbia, East Prussia and Galicia, where by Christmas the Germans, Austrians, Russians and Serbs had inflicted on each other three million casualties.
This book offers answers to the huge and fascinating question what happened to Europe in 1914, through Max Hastingss accustomed blend of top-down and bottom-up accounts from a multitude of statesmen and generals, peasants, housewives and private soldiers of seven nations. His narrative pricks myths and offers some striking and controversial judgements. For a host of readers gripped by the authors last international best-seller All Hell Let Loose, this will seem a worthy successor.
BOOK OF THE YEAR AS CHOSEN BY THE INDEPENDENT, FINANCIAL TIMES, OBSERVER, TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT AND SPECTATOR.
Like one of Field Marshal Haigs family whiskies, Max Hastings is a dram that steadily improves with age His position as Britains leading military historian is now unassailable In this enormously impressive new book, Hastings effortlessly masters the complex lead-up to and opening weeks of the First World War [He] is as magisterial as we would expect This is a magnificent and deeply moving book, and with Max Hastings as our guide we are in the hands of a master Nigel Jones, Telegraph
Hastings is the author of consistently good histories of WWII. But with Catastrophe he has reached a new level of excellence The Times
Magnificent Hastings writes with an enviable grasp of pace and balance, as well as an acute eye for human detail. Even for readers who care nothing for the difference between a battalion and a division, his book is at once moving, provocative and utterly engrossing Sunday Times
Masterly Hastings is a brilliant guide to that strange, febrile twilight before Europe plunged into darkness. Writing in pungent prose suffused with irony and underpinned by a strong sense of moral outrage this is history-writing at its best, scholarly and fluent for anyone wanting to understand how that ghastly, much-misunderstood conflict came about, there could be no better place to start than this fine book The Times
One could scarcely ask for a better guide to these horrors than Max Hastings he is a superb writer with a rare gift for evoking the rhythm, mood and raw physical terror of battle If you are looking for a humane and compelling interpretive chronicle of the formative months of this horrific conflict, you will find none better Mail on Sunday
Very readable. Character, pace, sense of landscape, battlefield detail all are superbly done it's a splendid read Observer
Max Hastings is the author of twenty-six books, most about conflict, and between 1986 and 2002 served as editor-in-chief of the Daily Telegraph, then editor of the Evening Standard. He has won many prizes both for journalism and his books, of which the most recent are All Hell Let Loose, Catastrophe and The Secret War, best-sellers translated around the world. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, an Honorary Fellow of Kings College, London and was knighted in 2002. He has two grown-up children, Charlotte and Harry, and lives with his wife Penny in West Berkshire, where they garden enthusiastically.