Turned away from the Royal Canadian Air Force for his apparent youth and
frailty, Farley Mowat joined the infantry in 1940. The young second
lieutenant soon earned the trust of the soldiers under his command, and
was known to bend army rules to secure a stout drink, or find warm -- if
nonregulation -- clothing. But when Mowat and his regiment engaged with
elite German forces in the mountains of Sicily, the optimism of their
early days as soldiers was replaced by despair. With a naturalist's eyes
and ears, Mowat takes in the full dark depths of war; his moving account
of military service, and the friends he left behind, is also a plea for
peace.