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Book Review: A Short, Sharp Assault On The Great War

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  • Book Review: A Short, Sharp Assault On The Great War

    A SHORT, SHARP ASSAULT ON THE GREAT WAR

    The Daily Telegraph, UK
    Aug 2 2007

    Nigel Jones reviews World War One: A Short History by Norman Stone

    Back in the Thatcherite 1980s Professor Norman Stone was the most
    fashionable historian of the day: a Niall Ferguson avant la lettre.

    Youngish. Handsomeish. Scottish. Right-wing. Iconoclastic. No respecter
    of reputations. A familiar figure in TV studios and newspaper columns
    as well as Oxford lecture halls. Then, always his own man, he prised
    the mud of Oxford from his feet, exchanging it for the dust of Istanbul
    where he has taught at two universities ever since.

    advertisement Since then we have heard little of him - apart from a
    controversy in which Stone refused to condemn his new Turkish homeland
    for the 1915 Armenian genocide - an event which he does not admit
    actually happened.

    Now he is back in Britain, at least in book form, using the genre in
    which he is most at home: not a Fergusonian slab of a study marshalling
    whole armies of sources and references, but a slim volume - almost
    an extended essay, a squib more than a sledgehammer - in which Stone
    compresses the whole history of the Great War into fewer than 200
    pages, and does it as entertainingly as his old admirers would expect.

    Reading it is much like hearing a lecture from the Professor in his
    prime - it fizzes with life and sparkles with aphorisms tossed off
    with aplomb, along with condemnations and commendations alike - most of
    them sensible - delivered with magisterial, even arrogant, authority.

    Haig's staff are 'creepy young officers who help him on with his
    coat'. The 'son of a peasant' Petain 'knew what he was about'.

    Ludendorff, by contrast, was 'really saving his own reputation: he
    would encourage others to make an end to the war, then turn round
    and say it had not been his fault.'

    As might be expected from someone who has already written a brilliant
    book on the much-neglected Eastern Front, Stone is especially strong
    on theatres apart from the over-familiar Western trenches: especially
    Russia and his beloved Turkey, whom he predictably acquits from
    responsibility for the Armenian genocide in a couple of lines.

    The great iconoclast is no revisionist here, falling in with the
    main received truths of modern Great War historiography. Thus the
    Germans engineered and started the war; Haig was mulishly stubborn
    in refusing to deviate from his full-on offensives, and stupid in
    his never-to-be-realised hopes of using his beloved cavalry; and the
    Second World War followed inexorably from the failure properly to
    occupy Germany after the Armistice and rub their noses in the fact
    of their defeat.

    In such a short book, which is at once a summary of the war and
    Stone's own take on it, something has to give, and what is missing
    is an adequate appreciation of the growing importance of air war and
    the war at sea.

    The book's faults are the obverse of its glittering virtues, its
    skimpy source notes indicating a slightly slipshod approach to dull
    facts. It is, surprisingly in such a short text, repetitious. (We
    learn twice that the Sarajevo assassin, Princip, was refreshing
    himself in a cafe when his victims happened by; and thrice that the
    Russian general staff was called the 'Stavka').

    Some errors are of the schoolboy howler variety: Hemingway's novel
    about Caporetto was called A Farewell to Arms not Goodbye to Arms
    and the explosive used to blow up the Messines ridge was ammonal,
    not TNT. If you are going to play the magisterial authority it is
    important to get the facts right.

    All told though, Stone's introduction to the war - following in
    the distinguished footsteps of Michael Howard, Correlli Barnett and
    Hew Strachan, who have all written their own short histories of the
    conflict - is thought-provoking, readable and thoroughly enjoyable,
    and his conclusion, as Hitler, temporarily blinded by a gas attack,
    meditates the next war on the very day that the Great War ended,
    is chillingly prophetic. Students of the great slaughter are now
    spoiled for choice.
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