These three Battleground Europe books on Ypres 1914 mark the centenary
of the final major battle of the 1914 campaign on the Western Front.
Although fought over a relatively small area and short time span, the
fighting was even more than usually chaotic and the stakes were
extremely high. Authors Nigel Cave and Jack Sheldon combine their
respective expertise to tell the story of the men - British, French,
Indian and German - who fought over the unremarkable undulating ground
that was to become firmly placed in British national conscience ever
afterwards.The most direct route to Ypres for the advancing German
columns in October 1914 was along the axis of the Menin Road. It was
here that the Old Contemptibles of the BEF earned their legendary heroic
status as they fought off increasingly desperate German assaults day
after day, whilst place names such as Zandvoorde, Polygon Wood and
Gheluvelt were first etched into the British national consciousness.
Bent and battered by the German storm, dressed in rags and short of
food, equipment and ammunition, the regiments of the old professional
army stood their ground against huge odds. When, on 11th November, they
finally halted the Prussian Guards around Polygon Wood, virtually within
sight of Ypres, they were reduced to one thin firing line. The BEF was
at its last gasp, but it had inflicted a crushing defeat on the German
army.