Aided by photos and a map, Durflinger evokes the sense of local community so vital 70 years ago but only a memory in our age of mega-cities and websites ... Durflinger has otherwise excelled in capturing the spirit of those times, so distant now, in one little corner of Canada. -- Brian Kappler Montreal Gazette Review 'Never look too closely,' the professionals told me; it only complicates the story. Serge Durflinger got up close with the Montreal suburb of Verdun. The results are fascinating. You may find that Quebec and the Second World War never look the same again. -- Desmond Morton, author of Fight or Pay: Soldiers' Families in the First World War Durflinger [has] crafted a community portrait of wide breadth that leaves few relevant aspects of wartime life unexplored ... This work has much to recommend it. The author is well versed in the general literature and readers will appreciate the way he situates local history within the larger national picture ... Durflinger's research is thorough, blending the relevant secondary reading with research in local archives and oral history interviews. It would make a valuable addition to undergraduate history courses ... Besides its relevance for both social and military historians, the book should also appeal to a more popular audience, for the main questions it poses continue to resonate in contemporary society. -- Jody Perrun H-Canada, August 2006 Fighting from Home is an essential contribution to Canadian military and social history. Serge Durflinger's innovative work transforms this story of ordinary people in wartime into a nuanced analysis that will strike a chord with a broad audience. -- Roch Legault, author of La Premiere Guerre Mondiale et le Canada: Contributions Socio-militaires Quebecoises Fighting From Home is a welcome addition to the Canadian literature on the Second World War. Serge Durflinger introduces readers to mid-twentieth-century Verdun, a linguistically-mixed, working-class city bordering Montreal. His lively study of civic pride and wartime patriotism breaks new ground in attempting to understand war at the local level. -- Magda Fahrni, author of Household Politics: Montreal Families and Postwar Reconstruction
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