A Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People 2017
When it started, many thought the Great War would be a great adventure.
Yet, as those who saw it up close learned, it was anything but. In the
Fields and the Trenches traces the stories of eighteen young idealists
swept into the brutal conflict, many of whom would go on to become
well-known 20th-century figures in film, science, politics, literature,
and business. Writer J. R. R. Tolkien was a signals officer with the
British Expeditionary Force and fought at the Battle of the Somme.
Scientist Irène Curie helped her mother, Marie, run twenty X-ray units
for French field hospitals. Actor Buster Keaton left Hollywood after
being drafted into the army's 40th Infantry Division. And all four of
Theodore Roosevelt's sons--Kermit, Archibald, Quentin, and Theodore
III--and his daughter Ethel served in Europe, though one did not return.
In the Fields and the Trenches chronicles the lives of heroes,
cowards, comics, and villains--some famous, some not--who participated
in this life-changing event. Extensive original material, from letters
sent from the front to personal journals, brings these men and women
back to life. And though their stories are a century old, they convey
modern, universal themes of love, death, power, greed, courage, hate,
fear, family, friendship, and sacrifice.