Amiens - Dundurn

Amiens

Dawn of Victory

Published September 2001

Description

It was the decisive battle of World War I. German commander Erich Ludendorff called it "the black day of the German army." Many authors have stated that it was the beginning of the end of the great conflict. And yet, until now, no book has been published on the climactic battle at Amiens.

Amiens was one of the first "modern" battles, and certainly the first attempted by the Allies. Employing the troops of five nations (including Canada) and utilizing secrecy, deception, and combined operations, the Allies won the first of a string of victories culminating in the Armistice one hundred days later. Amiens: Dawn of Victory is the first book to study the historic battle in minute detail. Using eyewitness accounts from dozens of survivors, plus many accounts, both published and unpublished, by the participants, the authors take us into the trenches, the tanks, and the cockpits.

Reviews

Contributors

James McWilliams

James L. McWilliams’ experience in the Army, historical research, and exploring the world led to a writing career. He has co-authored three First World War histories, The Suicide Battalion, Gas! The Battle For Ypres, 1915 and Amiens and created the historical-adventure series The MacHugh Memoirs.

R. James Steel

R. James Steel was an avid military historians. Steel has collaborated with James McWilliams on two previous books, World War I: The Suicide Battalion (1978, 1990) and Gas! The Battle for Ypres, 1915 (1989), as well as a unit history, The Battery (1996). Steel is also the author of The Men Who Marched Away: Canada's Infantry in World War I, 1914-1918 (1989).

Book Details

ePub
September 2001
-
250 pp
9781459712980
Paperback
September 2001
6x9 in
250 pp
9781550023428
ePub
September 2001
-
250 pp
9781550029574