A Long Way to Tipperary?

Bombs, bullets and bravery in the trenches of World War 1

Nonfiction, History, Military, World War I
Cover of the book A Long Way to Tipperary? by Maurice Graffet Neal, Memoirs Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Maurice Graffet Neal ISBN: 9781861511232
Publisher: Memoirs Publishing Publication: June 5, 2014
Imprint: Mereo Books Language: English
Author: Maurice Graffet Neal
ISBN: 9781861511232
Publisher: Memoirs Publishing
Publication: June 5, 2014
Imprint: Mereo Books
Language: English
Maurice Neal was 15 when he joined the King’s Royal Rifle Corps in 1906. By the time his regiment was shipped off to the Somme to fight in the First World War, he was a relatively experienced young sergeant. He and his men soon found themselves plunged into the full horror of trench warfare, daily enduring the shock of losing comrades and lying for hours in the mud surrounded by dead and injured fellow soldiers and deafened by the thunder of the bombs and guns. Throughout, Maurice kept a candid and beautifully-written diary of events: “Suddenly, a convulsion shakes him from head to foot and he lies still. The blood rapidly drains away from his face and hands. He turns ashen grey, and I realize that no more will Paddy sing to us… I look to the man on my right. He is making a gurgling noise and blood is oozing from his mouth he does not live long. What are our orders? Are we to lie like this until a bullet accounts for us all?” Now, almost a century later, Maurice’s diary can be published in full, thanks to the efforts of his granddaughter, Stephanie Hillier.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Maurice Neal was 15 when he joined the King’s Royal Rifle Corps in 1906. By the time his regiment was shipped off to the Somme to fight in the First World War, he was a relatively experienced young sergeant. He and his men soon found themselves plunged into the full horror of trench warfare, daily enduring the shock of losing comrades and lying for hours in the mud surrounded by dead and injured fellow soldiers and deafened by the thunder of the bombs and guns. Throughout, Maurice kept a candid and beautifully-written diary of events: “Suddenly, a convulsion shakes him from head to foot and he lies still. The blood rapidly drains away from his face and hands. He turns ashen grey, and I realize that no more will Paddy sing to us… I look to the man on my right. He is making a gurgling noise and blood is oozing from his mouth he does not live long. What are our orders? Are we to lie like this until a bullet accounts for us all?” Now, almost a century later, Maurice’s diary can be published in full, thanks to the efforts of his granddaughter, Stephanie Hillier.

More books from Memoirs Publishing

Cover of the book Once A Soldier by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Herodotus - The Gnome of Sofia by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book From Smuggling to Cotton Kings by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Blind Courage by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book They Let Me Out by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book A Peculiarly English Education by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Whisper of Truth by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book First XI by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Another Yin Oan a Wan Way Tickut by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Iron in the Blood by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book When Everything Else Fails, Say No to Poverty by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book The Merlin Destiny by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Starched Caps, Collars and Cuffs by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book Tremarrow by Maurice Graffet Neal
Cover of the book A Letter to my Grandchildren by Maurice Graffet Neal
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy