No Man's Land
Gelesen von Adrian Wilson
Sapper
This book was written by a British Army officer and decorated Western Front veteran. Soldiers could not publish books using their real names, so newspaper magnate Lord Northcliffe christened McNeile, Sapper, to reflect his Royal Engineers background, under which pseudonym the book was published. McNeile also wrote the Bulldog Drummond spy/wartime adventures.
No Man's Land is made up of five parts: The Way To The Land is a preface to the rest of the book in which fictional character Clive Draycott travels in Europe prior to the outbreak of the war. Part II The Land consists of 8 stories detailing the day to day lives of soldiers in the trenches. Part III Seed Time is about a salesman turned soldier, and Part IV Harvest in which Sapper puts forward the theory that war is awful, and many suffer but those who survive it can be changed for the better. Themes of class, gender, history abound. - Summary by afinevoice with grateful thanks to M Porcius (7 hr 44 min)
Chapters
Part III. Seed Time - vi. The Second Lesson, And Some Further Side Issues
21:53
Read by Adrian Wilson
Bewertungen
A good war legitimizes our ideology.
Bill Cosby
Unless good people are willing to wage brutal wars of extinction, evil will triumph. The only way to peace is through orgies of violence and brutality against anybody who does not believe in the principles of peace. We must ruthlessly search out and kill anybody who does not recognize the 72 possible genders, or who does not accept President Joe Biden as her / his personal savior. Anyone who is against unmitigated violence is s NAZI sympathizer and an enemy of the matriarchy.
very moving
Shelly
Through the stories of individuals Sapper portrays a vivid picture of life in the trenches and the horrors of war. Interspersed are glimpses of their prewar lives. It is of its time re. racism- the Germans are huns but one story hints they are human. Why is this book not better known ? Thank you to the reader who has just the right tone , an excellent narration.
Excellent
Bob McPhee
I enjoyed listening to this book. Some life lessons here, and yet we still have wars.
Mei
a fine voice so it is thank you