
Hundred Days: The End of the Great War
Nick Lloyd
An unmissable book that explores the brutal, heroic and extraordinary final days of the First World War
On the eleventh hour of the eleventh day in November 1918, the guns of the Western Front fell silent.
The Armistice, which brought the Great War to an end, marked a seminal moment in modern European and World history. Yet the story of how the war ended remains little-known. In this compelling and ground-breaking new study, Nick Lloyd examines the last days of the war and asks the question: how did it end? Beginning at the heralded turning-point on the Marne in July 1918, Hundred Days traces the epic story of the next four months, which included some of the bloodiest battles of the war.
Using unpublished archive material from five countries, this new account reveals how the Allies - British, French, American and Commonwealth - managed to beat the German Army, by now crippled by indiscipline and ravaged by influenza, and force her leaders to seek peace.
THE WESTERN FRONT BY NICK LLOYD IS AVAILABLE NOW
'This is a powerful and moving book by a rising military historian. Lloyd's depiction of the great battles of July-November provides compelling evidence of the scale of the Allies' victories and the bitter reality of German defeat' Gary Sheffield (Professor of War Studies)
'Lloyd enters the upper tier of Great War historians with this admirable account of the war's final campaign' Publishers Weekly
Product Details
About Nick Lloyd
Reviews for Hundred Days: The End of the Great War
Gary Sheffield (Professor of War Studies) Lloyd enters the upper tier of Great War historians with this admirable account of the war's final campaign
Publishers Weekly
Writing about the last 100 days of the war on the Western Front, Lloyd asks whether the Allies had learnt anything from the previous years of conflict and whether the Germans were really defeated in 1918
Joanna Bourke
The Telegraph
Lloyd's brisk and thoroughly engrossing book leaves no doubt that the Germans were beaten fair and square where it really mattered - on the battlefield
Dominic Sandbrook
The Evening Standard
There is a grim fascination to the endgame, as the hopes still nursed by the Germans were finally extinguished and the Allies won a victory that in seemed inevitable in retrospect
Metro
Gives the reader an insight into the raw emotions of the period and lends immediacy to the more sober narrative
The Oxford Times
Compelling, very readable
Books Monthly
As Nick Lloyd's account of the great Allied counter-offensives of summer 1918 convincingly shows, the Allies had learned (if painfully slowly) how to win battles . . . the German army was absolutely, totally defeated in the field
John Lewis-Stempel
The Express
Hundred Days is a bracing re-dramatization of the horrors that were most fresh in the minds of all concerned when those days were over
Steve Donoghue
Open Letters Monthly
Very well-researched and well-written. Reminds us just how important this crushing endgame was
Andrew Roberts