Search:
Browse Store Sections
Shopping Basket
Your cart is empty!
Shopping Basket   Checkout
Customer Login
Email Address
Password
Join Our Newsletter
Please fill in your email address below to join our newsletter mailing list.
Crimea

Crimea
Crimea
 
Trevor Royle's new history tells the whole story of the Crimean War and puts it in its context, drawing on a variety of new sources as well as representing classic accounts. Overall it is a powerful piece of narrative history. The Battle of the Alma, for instance, after which so many London streets and pubs have been named, is described in a vivid chapter, a "victory that owed everything to the resolve and courage of the British infantrymen." Advancing up a heavily defended hill, one young officer later reported "the fire was so hot that you could hardly conceive it possible for anything the size of a rabbit not to be killed." Royle then adds: "Minutes later he was shot in the cheek, losing 23 teeth and part of his tongue." This balance of excitement and terror is well captured throughout the work. (The Irish journalist William Russell reported a different perspective on the battle: "There was a sickening, sour, fetid smell everywhere and the grass was slippy with blood.") . Royle gives powerful accounts of the famous military engagements, the Charge of the Light Brigade and Thin Red Line at the Battle of Balaklava, the "ferocious hand-to-hand fighting" of the Battle of Inkerman. But he also places these flashes of military adventure in the larger context. This was a war fought in many places other than the Crimea--Royle's chapter on the fighting in Armenia, for instance, is entitled "the forgotten war", and there were also naval campaigns in the Baltic and Pacific. The British suffered casualties of 19,584 overall, but only one tenth of this number actually died on the battlefield; the rest died of disease. Royle's chapter on Florence Nightingale and her nurses recaptures the horror her contemporaries felt at hearing about the dreadful conditions of the Field Hospitals. Reading these accounts it is amazing that any wounded man survived at all: "Surgeons operated with unsterilised instruments, wounds were dressed with lint from discarded linen and operating tables were encrusted with the blood and detritus from previous patients." The whole book is a vivid and definitive read.

Trevor Royle
Softcover 512 pages Abacus 2000
 
Vg
 

Book Code:  SA0080
Our Price:£14.95
Quantity:



| World War 2 Planes |  Waffen-SS Books |   Kriegsmarine Books  | World War 2 Memoirs & BiographiesWorld War Two Uniforms & Insignia  | German Tanks Panzers of WW2 | Fallschirmjager Books | German Army of WW2 | Tiger Tank Books | World War Two German Aircraft | World War One WW1 BooksThird Reich Books | Spanish Civil War Books | Italian Forces WW2 Books | British Army WW2 Books| World War 2 PicturesWW2 Eastern Front Battles | Third Reich German Uniforms | Bargain Military Books | US Army WW2 Books | Used German Military Books | World War 2 weapons | Concord Publications Books
 


Epic Militaria - Military Uniforms, Insignia and Equipment For Re-enactors, Enthusiasts and Collectors


This site and all contents are © World War Two Books – Military History Books online
Email: sales@worldwartwobooks.com   Telephone: 01970 623 778

Web Design by Pink Digital