From the acclaimed military historian, a history of the outbreak of
World War I: the dramatic stretch from the breakdown of diplomacy to
the battles—the Marne, Ypres, Tannenberg—that marked the frenzied
first year before the war bogged down in the trenches. In Catastrophe
1914, Max Hastings gives us a conflict different from the familiar
one of barbed wire, mud and futility. He traces the path to war,
making clear why Germany and Austria-Hungary were primarily to blame,
and describes the gripping first clashes in the West, where the French
army marched into action in uniforms of red and blue with flags flying
and bands playing. In August, four days after the French suffered
27,000 men dead in a single day, the British fought an extraordinary
holding action against oncoming Germans, one of the last of its kind
in history. In October, at terrible cost the British held the allied
line against massive German assaults in the first battle of Ypres.
Hastings also re-creates the lesser-known battles on the Eastern
Front, brutal struggles in Serbia, East Prussia and Galicia, where the
Germans, Austrians, Russians and Serbs inflicted three million
casualties upon one another by Christmas. As he has done in his
celebrated, award-winning works on World War II, Hastings gives us
frank assessments of generals and political leaders and masterly
analyses of the political currents that led the continent to war. He
argues passionately against the contention that the war was not worth
the cost, maintaining that Germany’s defeat was vital to the freedom
of Europe. Throughout we encounter statesmen, generals, peasants,
housewives and private soldiers of seven nations in Hastings’s
accustomed blend of top-down and bottom-up accounts: generals
dismounting to lead troops in bayonet charges over 1,500 feet of open
ground; farmers who at first decried the requisition of their horses;
infantry men engaged in a haggard retreat, sleeping four hours a night
in their haste. This is a vivid new portrait of how a continent became
embroiled in war and what befell millions of men and women in a
conflict that would change everything.
Les mer
Europe Goes to War
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780385351225
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter