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First World War

AUTHOR: Hew Strachan
ISBN: 0670032956

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         Editorial Review

First World War
- Book Review,
by Hew Strachan

From Publishers Weekly
One of the leading historians of WWI offers this superior one-volume version of his massive projected three-volume work, the first volume of which, To Arms, clocked in at 1250-plus pages last year. Strachan strenuously avoids the traditional focus on the Western Front (and the British) and the conventional assumptions of generals' stupidity and soldiers' valor. The war as he sees it was a race among generals on all sides to create new weapons and tactics faster than their opponents, a race that the Triple Entente won. It was also a race among soldiers to fight with these new weapons and tactics instead of raw courage and numbers wherever possible. Yet Russia and the Dual Monarchy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire were totally unfit for a large modern war (one reason the czar and his empire fell in 1917) and were a source of fatal weakness to Germany's alliance even before Italy changed sides. The political background (including the rising consciousness of colonial nationalities conscripted for the war), social consequences and diplomatic finagling all face an equal amount of revision, leaving the book organized more thematically than chronologically. Readers already familiar with the sequence of events in strict order will benefit most. But all readers will eventually be gripped, and even the most seasoned ones will praise the insights and the original choice of illustrations. This is likely to be the most indispensable one-volume work on the subject since John Keegan's First World War, and will draw serious readers to the larger work. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal
Adult/High School–Strachan provides a comprehensive and gripping account of one of the most bloody and important wars in human history, bringing to readers a reality beyond its grim reputation. His greatest contribution is to restore the worldwide dimension to this conflict, for it was a war that was fought in Africa, the Middle East, the Pacific, and Eastern Europe, as well as in Western Europe. Furthermore, he shows the widespread effects of the war wherever it was fought, and he delineates the meaning the conflict had for its combatants. Some of his judgments might be debatable, but his accomplishment with this book is not. Well written and well illustrated with photographs, the volume lifts readers' eyes from the mud of Flanders.–Ted Westervelt, Library of Congress, Washington, DC Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
One merely has to read daily newspaper accounts of current conflicts in the Balkans or Middle East to confirm that the effects of World War I are still unfolding. Strachan, a history professor at Oxford University, is currently writing a scholarly three-volume history of the war. This work, geared for the general reader, utilizes a traditional narrative approach, but Strachan also provides interesting sidelights that focus on such topics as French treatment of deserters and the attitudes and efforts of African colonial troops. Strachan doesn't shy away from the question of "war guilt." He clearly regards the war as a pan-European blunder, but he also indicts Germany for efforts to upset the European states system that had endured since the Congress of Vienna in 1815. This is a concise, well-written account of the causes, course, and effects of a shattering conflict. Text complemented by maps and rarely seen photographs. Jay Freeman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Niall Ferguson, The New York Review of Books
"A towering achievement. . . . Hew Strachan has set out to put the ‘world’ back into the First World War."

Max Hastings, The Evening Standard
"One of the most impressive books of modern history in a generation."


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         Book Review

First World War
- Book Reviews,
by Hew Strachan

First World War

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Ninety years have passed since the outbreak of the First World War, yet as military historian Hew Strachan argues in this brilliant and authoritative new book, the legacy of the "war to end all wars" is with us still. A truly global conflict from the start, the war and many of its most decisive battles were fought in or directly affected the Balkans, Africa, and the Ottoman Empire. Even more than the Second World War, the First World War continues to shape the politics and international relations of our world, especially in hot spots such as the Middle East and the Balkans. Strachan has done a masterful job of reexamining the causes, the major campaigns, and the consequences of the First World War, compressing a lifetime of knowledge into a single definitive volume. Written in crisp, compelling prose and enlivened with vivid photographs, many of which have never appeared in print before, and detailed maps, The First World War re-creates this world-altering conflict both on and off the battlefield: the clash of ideologies between the colonial powers at the center of the war, the social and economic unrest that swept Europe both before and after, the military strategies employed with stunning success and tragic failure in the various theaters of war, the terms of peace and why it did not last. Drawing on material culled from many countries, Strachan offers a fresh, clear-sighted perspective on how the war not only redrew the map of the world but also set in motion the most dangerous conflicts of today. Deeply learned and powerfully written, The First World War will stand as a landmark of contemporary history.

FROM THE CRITICS

The Washingtton Post

If Strachan had the least sense of solidarity with his fellow historians, his book would have failed miserably. Instead, the breadth and depth of his knowledge -- Strachan is midway through a three-volume, "scholarly" history of World War I -- allowed the author to write with a rigor inspired, rather than undermined, by television's brevity. He offers a broad, coherent and convincing vision. The striking period photographs have been chosen with an acuity that reinforces the text. And the prose is so clear that the author's fellow academics may revoke his numerous honors. — Ralph LPeters

Publishers Weekly

One of the leading historians of WWI offers this superior one-volume version of his massive projected three-volume work, the first volume of which, To Arms, clocked in at 1250-plus pages last year. Strachan strenuously avoids the traditional focus on the Western Front (and the British) and the conventional assumptions of generals' stupidity and soldiers' valor. The war as he sees it was a race among generals on all sides to create new weapons and tactics faster than their opponents, a race that the Triple Entente won. It was also a race among soldiers to fight with these new weapons and tactics instead of raw courage and numbers wherever possible. Yet Russia and the Dual Monarchy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire were totally unfit for a large modern war (one reason the czar and his empire fell in 1917) and were a source of fatal weakness to Germany's alliance even before Italy changed sides. The political background (including the rising consciousness of colonial nationalities conscripted for the war), social consequences and diplomatic finagling all face an equal amount of revision, leaving the book organized more thematically than chronologically. Readers already familiar with the sequence of events in strict order will benefit most. But all readers will eventually be gripped, and even the most seasoned ones will praise the insights and the original choice of illustrations. This is likely to be the most indispensable one-volume work on the subject since John Keegan's First World War, and will draw serious readers to the larger work. Five city author tour. (On sale Apr. 26) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

With this superbly written survey, Strachan (Chichele Professor of the History of War, All Souls Coll., Oxford Univ.), a noted authority on this frequently misunderstood but critically important conflict, will provide the scholar and the interested reader alike with a suitable starting point for study. Ninety years since it began, Strachan details the important factors behind World War I, covers the major ground and naval campaigns and battles, and assesses the roles of leading officers and statesmen while simultaneously highlighting the home fronts and the non-European aspects of this cataclysmic event. The coverage is what one would expect from a survey, but the consistently superior writing separates this volume from its competitors. The photographs, many of which will be new to even the most devoted specialist, deserve special mention. General surveys of wars and campaigns are common in all types of libraries, but finely crafted works such as this merit our attention. While Strachan doesn't knock the recent superb efforts of John Keegan and Niall Ferguson off the shelves, he adds another excellent narrative history to the growing recent literature on the Great War. Strongly recommended for academic and public libraries.-John R. Vallely, Siena Coll. Lib., Loudonville, NY Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

School Library Journal

Adult/High School-Strachan provides a comprehensive and gripping account of one of the most bloody and important wars in human history, bringing to readers a reality beyond its grim reputation. His greatest contribution is to restore the worldwide dimension to this conflict, for it was a war that was fought in Africa, the Middle East, the Pacific, and Eastern Europe, as well as in Western Europe. Furthermore, he shows the widespread effects of the war wherever it was fought, and he delineates the meaning the conflict had for its combatants. Some of his judgments might be debatable, but his accomplishment with this book is not. Well written and well illustrated with photographs, the volume lifts readers' eyes from the mud of Flanders.-Ted Westervelt, Library of Congress, Washington, DC Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A well-conceived and lucidly written survey of the 20th century's first great bloodletting, with close attention to little-known episodes in and preceding the conflict. The First World War was preeminently a conflict between England and Germany over control of the sea, and consequently of European trade-a clash of Weltpolitik and Empire, as it were. Germany, writes Strachan (History/Oxford Univ.; World War I, 1999), challenged the "status quo in three ways: colonial, naval, and economic"; but that challenge does not translate to responsibility for the outbreak of the war, which in any event involved many other nations, many rivalries and grudges, and many little martial sparks that added up to one big conflagration. (For a time, Strachan observes, Austro-Hungarians hoped that the fire could be contained in a decisive Third Balkan War, meant to settle Serbia's hash once and for all.) Strachan notes that although the war was global, with theaters in Asia and Africa, our conception and images of it center on Europe-and even then only on the bloody trenches that cut across the continent. He also remarks that the standard histories forget the "war's other participants," apart from the soldiers: namely, "diplomats and sailors, politicians and laborers, women and children." Even in places where the war hit hardest-oddly, England suffered more losses in the First than the Second World War-it's in danger of being lost to memory, and Strachan's overview brings into sharp focus the proximate causes and critical moments of the conflict, from the well-known (Jutland, the Somme) to the comparatively little studied (the abortive English invasion of German-held Cameroon, the savage campaigns in theAlps). The war ended with an astonishing toll: more than 800,000 German soldiers in the spring of 1918 alone, followed by the deaths of many more due not to Allied bullets but to the arrival of the Spanish flu that summer. Heavily illustrated with maps and period photographs: the best single-volume treatment of the conflict in recent years. Agent: Michael Carlisle/Carlisle & Co.


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