Review
'A re-examination and new selection of the wartime diaries is overdue and now comes in a handsome and uncommonly well-edited edition.' -- Max Hastings SUNDAY TELEGRAPH 'Thanks to the editors' sterling efforts haid emerges from his diaries neither as a hero nor a villain but as a human being vividly aware of the frailty of his role in shaping history... This is a major and much-needed addition to the historiography of one of the most contentious periods in English history.' -- Trevor Royle THE SUNDAY HERALD 'edited by two distinguished military historians, they reveal a man very different from the stereotypical warmonger of Left-wing mythology.' -- Tom Kyle THE DAILY MAIL 'These personal writings reveal an intelligent, humane individual doing his best under impossible conditions.' -- Betty Tadman THE SCOTSMAN 'their (Sheffield and Bourne) excellent and succint introduction to these diaries...if anything emerges from these diaries and letters it is that Haig was perfectly human.' -- Allan Mallinson LITERARY REVIEW 'this comprehensive, unexpurgated edition, which throws completely new light on his career.' HISTORY TODAY 'Magnificiently edited' -- Raymond Carr THE SPECTATOR 'Thanks to excellent editing, much new light is thrown on Field Marshal Haig... an enthralling contemporary account.' THE GUARDS MAGAZINE
Product Description
There's a commonly held view that Douglas Haig was a bone-headed callous butcher, who through his incompetence as commander of the British Army in WWI, killed a generation of young men on the Somme and Passchendaele. On the other hand there are those who view Haig as a man who successfully struggled with appalling difficulties to produce an army which took the lead in defeating Germany in 1918, winning the greatest series of victories in British Military history.
These are therefore the diaries of the most controversial British general of the twentieth century. Just as the success of the Alanbrooke war diaries can be put down to its 'horse's mouth' view of Churchill and the conduct of WWII, so Haig's Diaries, hitherto only previously available in bowdlerized form, give the C-in-C's view of Asquith - he records him getting drunk and incapable - and his successor Lloyd George, of whom he was highly critical as well as his never previously published day by day accounts of the key battles of the war, not least the Somme campaign of 1916.
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