Nick Lloyd is Professor of Modern Warfare at King's College London, based at the Defence Academy UK in Shrivenham, Wiltshire. He is the author of four previous books, including Passchendaele- A New History, which was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller. He lives with his family in Cheltenham.
This is a bold book. Nick Lloyd has written a tour de force of
scholarship, analysis and narration . . . Lloyd is well on the way
to writing a definitive history of the First World War
*The Times*
Excellent on detail...Lloyd's book will be cherished by military
history buffs
*Sunday Times*
Authoritative and fast-paced...By the end of the book, one has a
panoramic view of this crucial theatre of war
*Sunday Telegraph*
A work of serious scholarship that reflects the author's
understanding not merely of the military campaigns, but of the men
who fought them. Lloyd has written a remarkably authoritative
overview of an expansive subject, and a perfect introduction to a
more granular study of the conflict
*The Telegraph*
This well-researched, well-written and cogently argued new analysis
overturns all our assumptions and received wisdom about the
fighting on the most important front of the Great War. Nick Lloyd
deserves congratulation for having written what will undoubtedly
now take its rightful place as the standard account of this vital
theatre of the conflict
*Andrew Roberts, author of ‘Churchill: Walking with Destiny’*
An enthralling read. Lloyd deftly guides us through a labyrinth of
military detail while never allowing the pace of his narrative to
slacken. His account of France's role on the Western Front, often
less well documented in Anglo-Saxon accounts, is particularly
revealing. Most of us are familiar with the names of the generals
involved, but Lloyd brings them sharply to life with his sensitive
portrayal of their personalities, idiosyncrasies and relationships
with one another. This is an endlessly complex subject to which
Lloyd has brought welcome lucidity while never for one moment
allowing us to forget the enormity of its tragedy
*Julia Boyd, author of Travellers in the Third Reich*
There were many fronts in World War I, but the Western Front, where
the industrialized great powers massed their men and resources, was
the crucial one. Nick Lloyd has given us the most up-to-date
account of the fighting there. He brings the key statesmen and
generals to life, as well as the brutal combat from the first
battles to the last. Lloyd crisply details the tactical and
technological innovation that brought victory, as well as the
coalition strategy, economic warfare, and home front management
that boosted the Allies and disintegrated the Central Powers
*Geoffrey Wawro, author of The Franco-Prussian War, A Mad
Catastrophe, and Sons of Freedom, and director of the University of
North Texas Military History Center*
Although a non-specialist in the history of World War I, I have
sought to learn as much as possible about that epochal calamity
that cast a dark shadow over the subsequent century. At the core of
a generation's agony was the Western Front, which I never fully
understood until I read Nick Lloyd's comprehensive, lucid, and
evocative narrative that made starkly clear what had previously
been a confusing jumble
*James M. McPherson, author of BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM; THE CIVIL WAR
ERA*
This is harder to do than it looks, but [Nick Lloyd] has produced a
well written, clear and snappy account of a familiar but always
dramatic story... The Western Front sets a fine example of
operational military history. It is the best modern single-volume
history of war on the Western Front and is likely to remain the
standard account for some time
*The Spectator*
The Western Front is an impressive achievement. It will, I am sure,
become the standard narrative account, and deserves a wide
readership
*TLS*
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