Failure to exploit the potential of an original idea is a recurring
phenomenon in our national history. Few failures, however, can have been
so costly in human life as that of our military commanders early in 1916
to appreciate that the tank was a war winning weapon. The slaughter of
the Somme, Passchendaele and Ypres salient had to be endured before
accepted 'conventional' methods were abandoned and the tank given a
chance.
Bryan Cooper describes the early tank actions in vivid detail, with many
eyewitness accounts. He tells of the courage and endurance of the crews
not just in battle but in the appalling conditions in which they had to
drive and fight their primitive vehicles. Scalded, scorched and poisoned
with exhaust fumes, constantly threatened with being burned to death,
these crews eventually laid the foundation for the Allied Victory in
World War I. The book is well illustrated with many original photographs
which give the present day reader a glimpse of the infancy of a dominant
weapon of modern war.