Review
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A timely re-appraisal . . . a masterpiece (General Lord Richard Dannatt)
Sweeps aside mythology and provides a rational explanation and cool description of what took place (Max Hastings The
Sunday Times)
Nick Lloyd has unearthed a mass of new material for this harrowing account of one of the most infamous engagements of
the Great War (Ian Thomson The Guardian)
Meticulously researched . . . A harrowing and important history (PD Smith The Guardian)
With clean, clear and often eviscerating writing, Nick Lloyd compels us to re-evaluate Passchendaele and all that word
conjures (Paul Gross, director and star of the film 'Passchendaele')
Rigorously researched . . . one of the great features of this excellent book, absent from too many less rigorous
histories of events in the First World War, is a clear account of how things were on the German side, and how the
British attack not only gained ground, but devastated German morale . . . Lloyd's research is superb; the book is
well-illustrated with photographs and s; he brings the battle and its political context vividly to life . . . this is
in almost every respect a model of what a work of history should be, and is now perhaps the definitive account
of this phase of the war on the Western Front (Simon Heffer The Telegraph)
I thought it both precise and compassionate - a properly definitive history, with clear lines from the strategic
planning, to the horror of the battle itself from both sides, through to its consequences for the war as it entered its
complex final phase (Dr Emily Mayhew)
A fresh and thorough examination of the events of July to November 1917 is definitely needed. Dr Nick Lloyd has achieved
this in his book Passchendaele: A New History, an account that is both scholarly and gripping. (Glyn Harper, Professor
of War Studies, Massey University)
Confirms his position among the best young scholars of WWI in this comprehensively researched, convincingly presented
analysis of the still-controversial 1917 battle of Passchendaele . . .Lloyd's thesis is controversial, but his
scholarship makes it impossible to dismiss (Publishers Weekly)
His narrative of the campaign is superb and written with clarity and dispassion. He teaches history at King's
College London and has done his research thoroughly in German and Allied archives. It is fascinating to know the
preoccupations, hopes and plans of the Kaiser ("The English must be made to grovel") and his generals, and to hear the
voices of German frontline soldiers (Lawrence James The Times)
From the Back Cover
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'Excellent. In almost every respect a model of what a work of history should be, and now perhaps the definitive
account of this phase of the war on the Western Front' Simon Heffer, Daily Telegraph
'Sweeps aside mythology and provides a rational explanation and cool description of what took place' Max Hastings,
Sunday Times
If one battle can be said to encapsulate the First World War it is Passchendaele: muddy trenches, splintered trees and
drowned craters; hundreds of thousands of soldiers killed, med or sed; and all for precious little gain. Yet as
rising historian Nick Lloyd shows on its 100th anniversary, Passchendaele was not the simple folly we have believed.
Based on rigorous research, including previously overlooked German records, and including much first-person testimony
that uniquely tells the story from both sides, he reveals how close the British came to outright victory and turning the
course of the war.
'I thought it both precise and compassionate - a properly definitive history' Dr Emily Mayhew
'Superb, written with clarity and dispassion' Lawrence James, The Times
'Both as narrative and analysis, this book is masterly' Allan Massie, Scotsman