The recent discovery of a wooden chest, unopened for 100 years revealed a treasure trove of eloquent trench diaries, letters and poetry. The author was Hamish Mann, a young Black Watch subaltern killed in France in 1917 just five days after his 21st birthday. Thanks to Mann's outstanding literary gifts and prodigious output, this book re-lives his fateful journey from the declaration of war, his voluntary work at a military hospital, his training and commission and, finally, his service with 8th Black Watch on the Somme. The daily hardship and trauma he experienced at the Front were shared with countless thousands of his comrades. But Hamish's extraordinary gift was his ability to record the traumatic events and the range of his emotions, writing often in his dug-out 'by the light of a guttering candle'. A century on, thanks to the Family's discovery and Jacquie Buttriss's sensitive commentary, Hamish's tragically short life can be celebrated and his literary legacy given the recognition it so richly deserves.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
Publication Date: 13 Nov 2018
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781526745095
About Jacquie Buttriss
Jacquie Buttriss is a biographer memoirist educational and children's author of 61 books published by Macmillan Hodder and Stoughton Harper-Collins and others. She has had two Sunday Times Bestsellers one of which was also Canada's best-selling non-fiction book 2015. Amongst her previous books have been three war-memoirs one of which was short-listed in the British Library's National Life-Story Awards. She has been a speaker on both BBC television and radio as well as writing for The Times The Guardian and the TES. A former headteacher Ofsted Inspector chair of two charities and currently a historian and museum research co-ordinator Jacquie loves writing about past events through the lives of the people who lived them. Her home is in an ancient Sussex settlement steeped in history.