The village of Givenchy-lès-la-Bassée sits on a small rise in the Pas de
Calais Department in northern France. One hundred years ago it was
overtaken by the First World War. The fighting there was intense -
eleven Victoria Crosses were won in this tiny locality between 1914 and
1918. Phil Tomaselli's in-depth account shows what happened at Givenchy
when it became a battlefield, and the story here was repeated in the
other villages and towns on the Western Front.
Givenchy's key position made it the target for crushing bombardments,
infantry assaults and subterranean warfare. The landscape was pulverized
by shellfire, the ground beneath was honeycombed with tunnels. Mining
operations, shelling, sniping and trench raids took place around the
remains of the village even when this stretch of the front line was
relatively quiet. The grueling struggle of attrition that characterized
the fighting on the Western Front continued here throughout the war.
Phil Tomaselli's gripping narrative makes extensive use of war diary
extracts, personal stories, official and unofficial histories.