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Behind The Lines
Behind The Lines
Oct 7, 2024 10:35 PM

Author:Andrew Carroll

Behind The Lines

'Quite simply, this is one of the greatest, most riveting books of war letters I have ever read.' Stephen E. Ambrose on War Letters

In 2001 Andrew Carroll authored the US top ten bestseller, War Letters - a unique compilation of extraordinary correspondence from American soldiers serving in US conflicts throughout history. Following the publication of this landmark work Andrew was inundated with letters from soldiers all around the world (to date he has a staggering 75,000 letters). Inspired by these messages he embarked on a quest to discover other previously unpublished letters written during conflicts around the globe. For three years Andrew travelled the world zealously collecting letters from over 35 different countries including Great Britain. Behind the Lines is the remarkable anthology that has been put together as a result of this work.

The first book of its kind, Behind the Lines will be a dramatic, intimate and unprecedented look at warfare as seen through the eyes of troops and civilians. Unparalleled in geographical and historical scope it covers all major global conflicts from World War I and II and the American Revolution, up to Afghanistan and Iraq. Featuring never-before-seen letters and emails from war zones, and including the memories and thoughts from those on both sides of the hostilities documented, Behind the Lines will be a truly emotive and poignant depiction of war assembled by a uniquely talented and driven author who always keeps the general reader and narrative in mind.

Reviews

A fascinating and moving book

—— Daily Telegraph

This is stuff from the front line, from the heart and from the guts

—— Saga

A remarkable social history, vividly bringing home the pathos, sacrifice and horror of war

—— Glasgow Evening Times

A priceless treasure

—— Tom Brokaw , War Letters

Wise is a terrific researcher and storyteller. Here she has woven a series of case studies into a fascinating history of insanity in the 19th century

—— Kate Summerscale , Guardian Books of the Year

Deeply researched and gripping...it makes for harrowing reading

—— A.N. Wilson , Mail on Sunday

An illuminating look at an area of social history that inspired Wilkie Collins among others

—— Sebastian Faulks , Daily Telegraph, Books of the Year

Excellent... One often feels as if one is actually present at the scenes she describes. There can be no higher praise... Inconvenient People is as interesting a work of social history as you are ever likely to read.

—— Anthony Daniels , Spectator

Fascinating and chilling, Inconvenient People reads like a series of Victorian novels in brief - only all the tales are true

—— Bel Mooney , Daily Mail

This superlative study opens the door on the cruelty of the quacks who locked up lost souls

—— Edward Pearce , Independent

Several riveting cases Sarah Wise has unearthed for this fine social history of contested lunacy in the 19th century... Wise has given us a fascinating book that teems with rich archival research. The pictorial sources are an added boon and make for a wonderfully illustrated addition to the history of the 19th century

—— Lisa Appignanesi , Daily Telegraph

Rich, gripping and moving mix of social history, psychiatry and storytelling

—— Your Family Tree

A dark and disturbing investigation...trenchant and disturbing book

—— John Carey , Sunday Times

There is so much to interest and entertain in this book, which is enhanced by over eighty informative illustrations

—— Gillian Tindall , Literary Review

A wonderfully engaging book

—— Jad Adams , Who Do You Think You Are Magazine

Fascinating book (4 stars)

—— Michael Kerrigan , Scotsman

Wise reopens 12 uncontested lunacy cases from the 1800s, meticulously exploring the details of each and recreating the stories with a page-turning eye for a great narrative

—— Independent

Sarah Wise knows how to grab the reader’s attention with phrases that would have done Bulwer-Lytton proud. But the book’s readability does not disguise its scholarship. This is a valuable contribution to our understanding of nineteenth-century

—— Charlotte Moore , Book Oxygen

I thrilled to Sarah Wise’s Inconvenient People, an enthralling study of those who fell foul of Victorian mad-doctors and greedy relatives

—— Philip Hoare , Sunday Telegraph

It makes for a harrowing read, but much of it is also hilarious, and as gripping as the most lurid Victorian melodramatic novel. Yet again, one closes a book with the impression that beneath the polished mahogany surfaces and shimmering silks of Victorian interiors lurked Hell itself

—— A. N. Wilson , Mail on Sunday

1913 has narrative verve and insight

—— Ian Thompson , Guardian Weekly

What emerges is a rich portrait and an important set of ideas

—— Economist

[Emmerson] takes the reader on a fascinating trip to the brash, bustling cities of North America, before heading off to places as diverse as Buenos Aires and Bombay

—— Good Book Guide

Magnificent

—— Christopher Clark , London Review of Books

[Emmerson’s] entertaining tour d’horizon is both witty and charming.

—— Jay Winter , Times Literary Supplement

A wonderful portrayal of a world before it was cataclysmically changed, a world very different from ours but with some frightening similarities

—— Good Book Guide

Brings the fantasies, anxieties and passions of city-dwellers immediately prior to the First World War eloquently to life

—— Joanna Bourke , BBC History Magazine

Emmerson provides a real sense of 1913 by combining details of individual lives with sweeping international trends: one of the great pleasures of this book is to see parallels between then and now

—— Anthony Sattin , Observer

Unique... A high-definition snapshot of the world as it stood a century ago

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

A series of vivid vignettes... Offers fascinating glimpses of everyday life

—— Mail on Sunday

A wonderful portrayal of a world before it was cataclysmically changed by war

—— Good Book Guide

Fascinating and sobering

—— Mail on Sunday

[A] fascinating and lively history

—— 4 stars , Daily Telegraph

Very complex – but you will grasp it

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

A fascination exploration

—— Mail on Sunday

Highly readable but profoundly researched, The Trigger represents a bold exception to the deluge of First World War books devoted to mud, blood and poetry

—— Ben Macintyre , The Times

a fascinating original portrait of a man and his country

—— Country and Town House
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