
To Fight Alongside Friends
Author: Gerry Harrison, David Crane
Narrator: Finlay Robertson
Unabridged: 7 hr 19 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: William Collins
Published: 07/03/2014

Author: Gerry Harrison, David Crane
Narrator: Finlay Robertson
Unabridged: 7 hr 19 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: William Collins
Published: 07/03/2014
Read many diaries from the Great War but this is one of the most moving. It records the thoughts of Captain Charlie May from going to France in November 1915 until the Battle of the Somme in July 1916. Full of humour, pathos and the deep abiding love he had for his wife Maude and daughter Pauline A r......more
Thoroughly enjoyed this book even though one knows from the beginning how it ends. Charles May was a very good writer and I wish the book could have been longer. I highly recommend this book.......more
Quite moving to read a personal diary from the days at WW 1 in the trenches et al. It does give you an insight and brings you closer to what the soldiers endured.......more
A poignant record of Captain May's time in France that leads up to his death on the very first day of the Somme offensive on July 1st followed by the plaintive, unreceived letter from his beloved wife and the mother of his child back in in England. May left for England from NZ when he was 14 and I......more
‘What shines through like sunshine is Charlie May’s default belief in service to country, his quiet commitment to others over self, and his sheer decency. You could bet your life on Charlie. And, in a way, we did’ The Times ‘Captain May’s words offer a rare and vivid insight into life in the trenches: of rats and death, and the men’s optimism as they prepared to go into battle. They also read as a moving love letter to the wife he adored and the little girl he couldn’t wait to be reunited with’ Daily Express ‘[We] want to hear the voices of those who were there, unencumbered by 21st century prejudices … ‘To Fight Alongside Friends’ [is] the disarmingly jaunty, previously unpublished diaries of Captain Charlie May … beautifully edited and minutely annotated’ Sunday Times ‘Reflective and acute … By July 1st 1916, when the last diary entry was entered at 5.45am, the reader feels that they know Charlie May, and what follows comes as a shock, as if a cinema reel had broken in mid-reel … [the diaries] linger in the memory [and] deserve to be made available to a wider audience. They testify to how the 1914 generation drew on literary expression to order and to mediate what is commonly supposed to have been an incommunicably dreadful experience’ Financial Times ‘Every so often one comes across a diary where it is the sense of personality behind it that lift it out of the ordinary: such a diary is that of Captain Charlie May’ David Crane ‘The diary of Captain Charlie May provides a fascinating insight into the mind of a young British officer. It is peppered with intriguing insights, acute observations and the hectic, heart-stopping flurries of nocturnal trench raids’Robin Cross, author of the bestselling ‘VE-Day’