What book are you reading now / or recommend?

Not a light read, but if you're interested in the period and want to see it from a French perspective, I can recommend it.

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Along with millions of other Frenchmen, Louis Barthas, a thirty-five-year-old barrelmaker from a small wine-growing town, was conscripted to fight the Germans in the opening days of World War I. Corporal Barthas spent the next four years in near-ceaseless combat, wherever the French army fought its fiercest battles: Artois, Flanders, Champagne, Verdun, the Somme, the Argonne. Barthas’ riveting wartime narrative, first published in France in 1978, presents the vivid, immediate experiences of a frontline soldier.

This excellent new translation brings Barthas’ wartime writings to English-language readers for the first time. His notebooks and letters represent the quintessential memoir of a “poilu,” or “hairy one,” as the untidy, unshaven French infantryman of the fighting trenches was familiarly known. Upon Barthas’ return home in 1919, he painstakingly transcribed his day-to-day writings into nineteen notebooks, preserving not only his own story but also the larger story of the unnumbered soldiers who never returned. Recounting bloody battles and endless exhaustion, the deaths of comrades, the infuriating incompetence and tyranny of his own officers, Barthas also describes spontaneous acts of camaraderie between French poilus and their German foes in trenches just a few paces apart. An eloquent witness and keen observer, Barthas takes his readers directly into the heart of the Great War.
 
Just finished Kill ‘Em All by John Niven which is the sequel to Kill Your Friends. Not quite as good but still a dark satire.
 
Somme Mud
Dont Cry for me Sergeant Major
Pull up a sandbag

Just had delivered this morning appropriately on 1 July 'Upto Mametz and Beyond'! Tells the story of the Welsh Division on the Somme!

“Equipment, ammunition, rolls of barbed wire, tins of food, gas-helmets and rifles were lying about everywhere. There were more corpses than men, but there were worse sights than corpses. Limbs and mutilated trunks, here and there a detached head, forming splashes of red against the green leaves, and, as an advertisement of the horror of our way of life and death, and of our crucifixion of youth, one tree held in its branches a leg, with its torn flesh hanging down over a spray of leaf.”
 
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I’m halfway through “The Librarian Of Auschwitz”

It’s a true story based on the accounts of Dita, the ‘librarian’. There we obviously no Library’s in Auschwitz but there were books that were smuggled in and she was responsible for making sure they stayed hidden.

“Books are dangerous, they make people think” - I love that line
 
what’s everyone reading at the moment . I’m reading “ I heard you paint houses” by Charles Brandt. It’s rhe story of frank Sheeran the guy who killed jimmy Hoffa apparently. Very good read
 
Just finished the Librarian Of Auschwitz, which is brilliant and now just started a biography of Diego Maradona
 
At any one time the latest by either Peter Robinson, Mark Billingham or Andrea Camilleri ( though he just died, so only has one book left to come out).
 

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