Some Desperate Glory is the diary of a British officer (Edwin Campion Vaughan), written during the first eight months of 1917 while he was deployed near the Cambrai sector and then moved up in late July to Ypres at the start of the Battle of Passchendaele. The diary was published posthumously in 1981 by Henry Holt and Company. Writing in the Wall Street Journal in 2006, James J. Cramer cites Some Desperate Glory as one of the five best books on war: “Vaughan describes the screams of the wounded who had sought refuge in the freshly gouged holes only to find themselves slowly drowning as rain fell and the water level rose. A relentlessly stark account of the war's bloodiest, most futile battle.”[1]
Vaughan ended his diary on August 28, reflecting the futility of Passchendaele with: " So this was the end of 'D' Company. Feeling sick and lonely, I returned to my tent to write out my casualty report; but instead I sat on the floor and drank whisky after whisky as I gazed into a black and empty future."[2]
Notes
edit- ^ "Five Best". Wall Street Journal. 2006-10-07. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ Some Desperate Glory. The Diary of A Young Officer, 1917, C.E.C. Vaughan and J.P.M. Vaughan, 1981.
References
edit- Vaughan, Edwin Campion (1981). Some Desperate Glory. The Diary of A Young Officer, 1917. Frederick Warne (publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0333387279.
External links
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