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∎ Read "Over the top" Arthur Guy Empey Books

"Over the top" Arthur Guy Empey Books



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Download PDF "Over the top" Arthur Guy Empey Books

This book was originally published prior to 1923, and represents a reproduction of an important historical work, maintaining the same format as the original work. While some publishers have opted to apply OCR (optical character recognition) technology to the process, we believe this leads to sub-optimal results (frequent typographical errors, strange characters and confusing formatting) and does not adequately preserve the historical character of the original artifact. We believe this work is culturally important in its original archival form. While we strive to adequately clean and digitally enhance the original work, there are occasionally instances where imperfections such as blurred or missing pages, poor pictures or errant marks may have been introduced due to either the quality of the original work or the scanning process itself. Despite these occasional imperfections, we have brought it back into print as part of our ongoing global book preservation commitment, providing customers with access to the best possible historical reprints. We appreciate your understanding of these occasional imperfections, and sincerely hope you enjoy seeing the book in a format as close as possible to that intended by the original publisher.

"Over the top" Arthur Guy Empey Books

Empey's "Over the Top" provides a foot soldier's view of combat in World War One. Empey, an American, volunteered to serve in the British Army on the Western Front, before the United States' entry into the war. His narrative carries readers from his initial decision to get into the fight, through his training and into the trenches. His account is highly readable and carries indelible marks of authenticity. While Empey wrote of combat experience, much of the text covers seemingly-endless marches from point to point: remember, in the World War One era, armies moved mainly by muscle power, not automotive power. Empey's intent in the book -- according to his introduction -- was to provide his contemporary American readers with a personal perspective of British soldiers, with the implication that "we" as a nation shoud be in the fight alongside them. For readers a century later, his narrative allows you to share the experience of foot soldiering. This is not a scholarly investigation of the whys and wherefores of World War One, nor is it a condemnation of the brutality and futility of war like "All Quiet on the Western Front." It is, instead, one soldier's account of life -- and death -- on the Western Front in 1916. There are other books that will inform readers about the strategies, the great offensives, the horrible slaughter of warfare as armies learned to cope with new technologies for killing. This one will inform you about what it was like to be in the trenches, behind the lines awaiting your unit's turn in those trenches, or out in front scouting the enemy's lines. A reader with some military experience will probably say, "Yes, I get it." Those without will come away from the book with a new appreciation for things their grandfathers and great grandfathers endured.

Product details

  • Paperback 378 pages
  • Publisher Ulan Press (August 31, 2012)
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00B6XXS90

Read "Over the top" Arthur Guy Empey Books

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"Over the top" Arthur Guy Empey Books Reviews


This was really a nice read. I have read numerous autobiographies about the trench fighting in WW1 and this aligned with the rest. I say that because some of the reviews I read before reading this book stated this book was less than truthful or just propaganda. What was interesting about this book was that it was written and published while the war was still going on. That actually detracted a bit for me because the names of some towns and battles were omitted as the war was still being fought. I only gave it 4 stars because the version I was reading had all the pictures omitted.
I read this book at my father's suggestion many years ago (late forties); probably the first book I ever read. I enjoyed it immensely so much so that I never forgot it. So having temporarily run out of a book to read I decided to re-read that which had so interested me all those years ago. I was not disappointed.

The story is that of an American who fought for the Brits in WWI. Describing the perils of war he paints a no nonsense picture of war in the trenches from a very personal perspective. Not a hero, at least in the usual sense of the word, his description of the soldiers every day experiences from fighting vermin (cooties) to the age old problems and complaints concerning the ineptness of the officer class is proof that over the years things do not really change. Officers' make plans; the rank and file do the fighting always complaining that what they are going to do makes little sense. The plan is passed on and the specified moment "over the top they go.." Keeping in mind that this is trench warfare as practiced then leaves a modern wondering how anyone could survive this idiotic way of fighting a war. But then one comes to understand the folly of it all as to whether it has been any better in subsequent wars to storm the beaches as in Iwo or Normandy. Let's face it...there is no good way to fight war and this book explicitly presents that truth.

Nonetheless I would recommend this book to anyone from six to sixty and beyond. A profound question of the worth and or folly of war will remain with you while not only reading the book but also when same has been finished. I, too, am a former Marine and proud to be. But war is something I could do without... .
I have an original Putnam (The Knickerbocker Press, NY) from 1917, which I recently read. (Almost tossed. Glad I didn't!) Empey is a brilliant writer. This is a page turner. (Being a fan of Downton Abbey didn't hurt me either.)
I purchased THIS book to loan out because my original is fragile. However, I find it disappointing that the original photos, illustrations, and diagrams are MISSING from this latest publication. That is part of what makes my original book such a treat. However I would discourage no one from purchasing this book. This is my kind of history.
Empey's "Over the Top" provides a foot soldier's view of combat in World War One. Empey, an American, volunteered to serve in the British Army on the Western Front, before the United States' entry into the war. His narrative carries readers from his initial decision to get into the fight, through his training and into the trenches. His account is highly readable and carries indelible marks of authenticity. While Empey wrote of combat experience, much of the text covers seemingly-endless marches from point to point remember, in the World War One era, armies moved mainly by muscle power, not automotive power. Empey's intent in the book -- according to his introduction -- was to provide his contemporary American readers with a personal perspective of British soldiers, with the implication that "we" as a nation shoud be in the fight alongside them. For readers a century later, his narrative allows you to share the experience of foot soldiering. This is not a scholarly investigation of the whys and wherefores of World War One, nor is it a condemnation of the brutality and futility of war like "All Quiet on the Western Front." It is, instead, one soldier's account of life -- and death -- on the Western Front in 1916. There are other books that will inform readers about the strategies, the great offensives, the horrible slaughter of warfare as armies learned to cope with new technologies for killing. This one will inform you about what it was like to be in the trenches, behind the lines awaiting your unit's turn in those trenches, or out in front scouting the enemy's lines. A reader with some military experience will probably say, "Yes, I get it." Those without will come away from the book with a new appreciation for things their grandfathers and great grandfathers endured.
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