Showing posts with label Britain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Britain. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 July 2010

Reader Review: Forgotten Voices of Dunkirk


Clare O’Brien reviews Forgotten Voices of Dunkirk by Joshua Levine.


by Clare O’Brien,

If you are in search of a detailed historical account of the evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk early in the Second World War, this book is not for you. Aside from a brief foreword by Peter Snow and a short factual introduction to each of the book’s ten chapters, Forgotten Voices of Dunkirk provides no factual overview or analysis of the events that sparked Operation Dynamo.

Nevertheless, the primary source material provided here presents a particularly vivid picture of what it was like to be caught up in history in May-June 1940. The latest in a series of historical anthologies drawing on the Imperial War Museum Sound Archive, the book transcribes accounts by those who personally experienced the events of the time – from the military rank-and-file to officers, nurses, medics, sailors and civilians. Accompanied by contemporary photographs, the reminiscences range from short terse paragraphs, which are more fearsome for what they do not say, to long vibrant accounts by men whose memories have been permanently scarred by their experiences.

Presented in rough chronological order, the accounts reveal how attitudes among ordinary people gradually developed from the preamble of the phoney war to the shock of this first major military defeat. At first, old-fashioned jingoism and xenophobia mingles with a very real excitement at the prospect that ‘something might happen’ to put an end to the drabness of poverty and unemployment at home. Once it does, the tone abruptly changes. Horrors are steadily heaped on horrors and naïve British boys are confronted with a daily nightmare of mutilation, misery and death.

An entire chapter is devoted to the massacre of British prisoners by the Waffen-SS at Le Paradis and Wormhout. However, the smaller horrors are almost harder to take in than such widescreen atrocities. As always, the devil is in the details: a young medic assisting at a hurried amputation (‘what has stayed with me is the weight of that arm. I carried it out into the night, and threw it into a ditch, and it was the weight of it’), a French refugee giving birth in the back of an army truck to the sound of gunfire, a wounded man trying to commit suicide by holding a bullet against his head and detonating it with another.

The accounts of the rescue itself touch upon cowardice and selfishness, as well as bravery and heroism. Men were shot for trying to jump the queue, and some smaller boats sank as they were swamped by panic-stricken soldiers. Surreal episodes abound – men trying to shave before embarking for home, dogs rescued from the beach at Dunkirk, a phalanx of kilted Scots refusing to be taken to Dover and turning around to continue the battle.

Author/compiler Joshua Levine is a playwright and TV scriptwriter. Although his assemblage of ‘forgotten voices’ may not provide much in the way of original thought or new analysis, it nevertheless offers the reader an account of human experiences of Operation Dynamo, which is more personal than history and more powerful than fiction.


Forgotten Voices of Dunkirk, Joshua Levine (Ebury)


Clare O'Brien is a retired teacher of History and English. She now works as a freelance writer.


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Monday, 15 December 2008

Messenger of Death: Capt Nolan & the Charge of the Light Brigade


David Buttery
Pen & Sword

A biography of the man remembered as the captain who ordered the Charge of the Light Brigade during the Crimean War, which provides a reassessment of the life of Captain Louis Nolan and his role in the Charge.

Tuesday, 9 December 2008

We Will Not Fight… The Untold Story of World War One’s Conscientious Objectors


Will Ellsworth-Jones
Aurum

The tale of the British men who refused to fight in the First World War, at the heart of which lies the story of Bert Brocklesby, who was sentenced to death for refusing to join the army.

The Western Front, Richard Holmes (BBC Books)

A new edition of Holmes’ classic text, which covers the creation of the Western Front and the experiences of the British Army in France, and clarifies some of the complexities of the Western Front.

Gladstone: God and Politics, Richard Shannon (Continuum)

A study of Gladstone, which provides an account of his political career, at the centre of which is placed his intense religious faith and desire to realise God’s purposes.

The Lost Villages: In Search of Britain’s Vanished Communities, Henry Buckton (I.B. Tauris)

The story of some of the more recent lost villages in Britain, which include Hallsands in Devon and villages in Wiltshire and Dorset, requisitioned to help safeguard the nation but never given back.

London: The Autobiography, Jon E. Lewis (Constable)

A history of the events, everyday life and character of the capital over the last 2,000 years, from Boudicca’s raid on Roman London to the terrorist bombings of 7/7, told by Londoners and visitors to the city.

Thursday, 27 November 2008

Queens Consort: England’s Medieval Queens, Lisa Hilton (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)


An account of the lives of twenty women who were crowned queen between 1066 and 1503 and of their influence on the nature of the monarchy and direction of the state.

The Diary of Edmund Harrold, Wigmaker of Manchester 1712-15, ed. Craig Horner (Ashgate)


A transcription of the diary of Edmund Harrold, who was born in 1678 and seemingly lived and worked his whole life in Manchester as a barber and wigmaker, which offers an insight into the social, professional and private life of an impoverished inhabitant of Manchester during a time of economic and social change.

A Companion to the Anglo-Zulu War, Ian Knight (Pen & Sword)


A reference guide to the Anglo-Zulu War, a defining moment in British imperial history, which provides summaries of the issues, events, armies and individuals involved and examines the impact of the war on popular culture.
 
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