A frontline field of view from editors who traveled with a mission to report the war’s reach and meaning for America.
Somewhere Near the War offers a nonfiction collection drawn from a dozen editors commissioned by the British government to visit England, the battle front, and the grand fleet. Their letters describe the journey across the Atlantic, the pace of war reporting, and the careful balance between censorship and candor. The book blends travel writing with reflections on duty, friendship between nations, and the American outlook during a pivotal moment in history.
Readers will encounter vivid scenes from hospitals, ships at sea, and bustling cities, along with candid observations about American soldiers, allied cooperation, and the moral stakes of war. The author’s voice ties together travel, journalism, and a nation finding its role on the world stage.
- Accounts of crossing the Atlantic and entering the war zone under military prudence and curiosity.
- Grounded observations of Paris, London, and other key locales shaped by war, memory, and tradition.
- Personal anecdotes about soldiers, doctors, and civilians navigating danger, duty, and endurance.
- Smaller moments of humor, rumor, and the human side of global conflict.
Ideal for readers of historical letters, wartime journalism, and travel writing that broadens the view of America’s path through world events.