Frontline reflections from a German cavalry officer at war — a intimate, unsparing look at life in the trenches, the chaos of movement, and the human costs of modern conflict.
The book gathers diary-like episodes from 1914–1918, recounting moments in Flanders, Galicia, and the eastern front. It blends vivid battlefield detail with stark questions about duty, doubt, and the sense of belonging in a war that reshapes every day. Read this edition to glimpse the lived experience behind the headlines, from patrols and orders to the quiet, human scenes that endure.
- Relatable, first-person scenes of marching, bivouacs, and the constant pull between fear and resolve
- Observations on logistics, supply shortages, and the oddities of wartime politics and propaganda
- Portraits of soldiers, horses, and refugees, showing how war touches civilians and uniforms alike
- Reflections on purpose, futility, and the toll of repeated front-line exposure
Ideal for readers of war memoirs and historical journals who seek a solitary, unvarnished perspective on World War I’s human dimension.