GUTSCHEIN
Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.
Bitte haben Sie einen Moment Geduld, wir legen Ihr Produkt in den Warenkorb.
On July 1st, 1916, 120,000 men walked into the deadliest morning in British military history. Most of them never came home.
What you are about to discover will change the way you see war forever. Not the war of generals and grand strategies, but the war of real people. A fifteen-year-old boy who lied about his age to enlist. A father who wrote his last letter to his wife and baby daughter hours before zero hour. A soldier who lay wounded and alone in no man's land for hours, wondering if anyone would find him before the stealthy cold of death did. Few people know that the commanders who sent 120,000 men over the top that morning told them to carry walking sticks. Rifles, they said, would not be necessary. The bombardment had already won the battle. Except it hadn't. The wire was uncut. The machine guns were loaded. And eight men were hit every single second of the first hour. The Battle of the Somme is not a book about maps and military theory. It is a deeply human account of the worst day in British military history, told entirely through the diaries and letters of the men and women who lived it. Their voices, raw and unfiltered, pull you into the trenches, across no man's land, and into a battlefield hospital where one woman learned to tell the difference between the cold of night and the cold of death using only her hands. This book is for anyone who has ever wanted to understand what war really costs, not in statistics, but in people. In fathers. In sons. In boys who wrote home about skylarks singing over the wire the morning before everything changed. Over one million casualties. One battle. One truth that history has never told quite like this. Get your copy today. These voices have waited over a century to be heard.Wie gefällt Ihnen unser Shop?