
War Memorial by Clive Aslet
Clive Aslet's War Memorial: The Story of One Village's Sacrifice from 1914 to 2003, is a powerful story of those who died in war. Who were the men and women whose names are commemorated on war memorials around the country? Where did they live - and how and why did they die? Such questions usually go unanswered, but this book for the first time unravels the story of one war memorial, in the Dartmoor village of Lydford. Through original documents, Clive Aslet traces in vivid detail the lives of the twenty-two men, and one woman, who made the supreme sacrifice fighting for Britain in the two World Wars, the Falklands and Iraq. The result is an intimate portrait of one corner of the countryside in the twentieth century, and an extraordinary tale of the endurance and bravery of otherwise ordinary people - farmers, masons, railway-workers, landowners, schoolchildren - who, but for the war memorial, would be forgotten. The perfect book for those who loved The Real Dad's Army by Colonel Rodney Foster, War Memorial is about the people who laid down their lives for us, and who will always be remembered. Praise for War Memorial: 'With this book Aslet makes an important contribution to social history... the stories are not tidy portraits of heroism but achingly real portraits of wartime loss experienced by a changing rural community' Daily Express 'Leaves one with a profound sense of the vagaries and cruelties of fate, particularly during times of war' Country Life '[A] fascinating history . . . Aslet tells their stories with great elegance, and though the period has been gone over in exhaustive detail, he still manages fresh insights that bring it to vivid life' Daily Telegraph Clive Aslet is an award-winning journalist and former Editor of Country Life who has spent his career observing Britain and its ways. An authority on British life, he has written several books on the subject - including The Last Country Houses, Landmarks of Britain, and Villages of Britain.
With this book Aslet makes an important contribution to social history.. the stories are not tidy portraits of heroism but achingly real portraits of wartime loss experienced by a changing rural community * Daily Express *
Through the apparently narrow perspective of the memorial, Aslet opens up a vista on a broad front of British 20th and 21st Century History ... a fascinating mix of history and sociology that leaves one with a profound sense of the vagaries and cruelties of fate, particularly during times of war * Country Life *
[A] fascinating history ... Aslet tells their stories with great elegance, and though the period has been gone over in exhaustive detail, he still manages fresh insights that bring it to vivid life * The Daily Telegraph *
An engaging, absorbing work...a welcome Christmas stocking filler -- Chris Baker * The Long, Long Trail/Great War Forum *
A moving look at the harrowing stories behind a century of names inscribed on the war memorial of a small and sleepy Devon village * Sunday Times *
His book is at once a touching tribute to ordinary lives hallowed by the horrible accident of bring brutally cut off long before their allotted time; and a vivid testimony to why memory - personal and collective - matters so much both to individuals, and to our increasingly fissiparous and fractured nation * Sunday Telegraph *
Through the apparently narrow perspective of the memorial, Aslet opens up a vista on a broad front of British 20th and 21st Century History ... a fascinating mix of history and sociology that leaves one with a profound sense of the vagaries and cruelties of fate, particularly during times of war * Country Life *
[A] fascinating history ... Aslet tells their stories with great elegance, and though the period has been gone over in exhaustive detail, he still manages fresh insights that bring it to vivid life * The Daily Telegraph *
An engaging, absorbing work...a welcome Christmas stocking filler -- Chris Baker * The Long, Long Trail/Great War Forum *
A moving look at the harrowing stories behind a century of names inscribed on the war memorial of a small and sleepy Devon village * Sunday Times *
His book is at once a touching tribute to ordinary lives hallowed by the horrible accident of bring brutally cut off long before their allotted time; and a vivid testimony to why memory - personal and collective - matters so much both to individuals, and to our increasingly fissiparous and fractured nation * Sunday Telegraph *
Clive Aslet is an award-winning journalist and former Editor of Country Life who has spent his career observing Britain and its ways. An authority on British life, he has written several books on the subject - including The Last Country Houses, Landmarks of Britain, and Villages of Britain - and is well-known as a campaigner on countryside and other issues. He writes and blogs extensively for national newspapers such as the Daily Telegraph, the Sunday Telegraph and the Daily Mail Online, and frequently appears on radio and television.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780670921539 |
| ISBN 10 | 067092153X |
| Title | War Memorial |
| Author | Clive Aslet |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Penguin Books Ltd |
| Year published | 2012-10-25 |
| Number of pages | 368 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |