Series Foreword Preface Timeline 1 The United States in the First World War 2 Drafting and Training the Army 3 Morals and Morale 4 Americans All: The Experiences of Minorities and Women in the Military 5 Fighting Overseas 6 The Wounds of War 7 Coming Home Glossary Bibliography Index
Jennifer D. Keene is an Associate Professor of History and Chair of the department at Chapman University in southern California. She is the author of Doughboys, the Great War and the Remaking of America (2001) and The United States and the First World War (2000). She has received numerous fellowships for her research, including a Mellon Fellowship, a Graves Award, a Fulbright Senior Scholar Award to France, an Albert J. Beveridge Research Grant, and a National Research Council Postdoctoral Research Award.
Keene offers a solid introduction to the trials and tribulations
experienced by American soldiers as they took part in the World
War….In a clear and concise manner, she begins with an overview of
the events leading to the American declaration of war. She then
proceeds through the drafting and training of the army, the process
of adjusting to fighting overseas, and the frustrations of men
waiting to return home after achieving victory….The real value in
Keene's work is her ability to look beyond the trenches of the
Western Front, which have long dominated any discussion of the
World War, and illuminate the struggles of a people and a nation
engaging in their first truly international and modern war….[A]
welcome addition to the library of the casual reader and the
serious scholar alike.
*The Journal of Military History*
Keene provides, for students and general readers, an account of the
daily lives of American enlisted men during World War I, recounting
their experiences from training camps to France and back home. She
gives an overview of the causes of the war and the overall
strategy, but focuses mostly on their experiences in service.
Topics discussed include the effect of the war on men and women at
home; morale, personal habits, and religion; diversity,
particularly the experiences of African American and foreign born
soldiers and female nurses and war workers; fighting and service
roles; casualties, death, and the 1918 influenza pandemic; the
reaction of soldiers to the Armistice; and their postwar lives.
*Reference & Research Book News*
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