The opening battles on the Western Front marked a watershed in military
history. A dramatic, almost Napoleonic war of movement quickly gave way
to static, attritional warfare in which modern weaponry had forced the
combatants to take to the earth. Some of the last cavalry charges took
place in the same theatre in which armored cars, motorcycles and
aeroplanes were beginning to make their presence felt. These dramatic
developments were recorded in graphic detail by soldiers who were
eyewitnesses to them. There is a freshness and immediacy to their
accounts which Matthew Richardson exploits in this thoroughgoing
reassessment of the 1914 campaign. His vivid narrative emphasises the
perspective of the private soldiers and the junior officers of the
British Army, the men at the sharp end of the fighting.