By, of all places…Lucas Films? It's pretty good, imho.
Pretty impressive that a 4th or 5th grader even knew about the Somme. Well done!JABQ04 said:
Young Indy was my jam in the day. That's what got me hooked on WWI back in 4th or 5th grade. While the rest of my classmates did paper mache Alamos with modern M16 toting soldiers, I hand painted approx 200 German and British WWI figures and did a history fair project on the Somme. Still angry I didn't win.
I am not sure why I was so slow to develop an interest in the Great War, perhaps because my dad and so many of his friends had fought in WWII and it was more recent having ended not too many years before I was born. And there were two theatres to deal with. I did find a helmet in an old abandoned shed/barn from WWI.JABQ04 said:
Thanks to Young Indy!
Tuchman's Guns of August is a classic. It was my entry into reading about the 'Great War'.aalan94 said:
This is good stuff. If anyone here has not read Barbara Tuchman's "Guns of August" please buy it and read it. One of the best history books I've ever read. The history is good and it reads like a page-turning novel. Good stuff. I read it on a train from Strasbourg to Holland in 1995, and could see the pillboxes from the Maginot Line outside my window from time to time.