
The Good Soldier: The Biography of Douglas Haig
Gary Mead
Posterity has not been kind to Douglas Haig, the commander of the British Expeditionary Force on the Western Front for much of the First World War. Haig has frequently been presented as a commander who sent his troops to slaughter in vast numbers at the Somme in 1916 and at Passchendaele the following year.
The Good Soldier re-examines Haig's record in these battles and presents his predicament with a fresh eye. More importantly, it re-evaluates Haig himself, exploring the nature of the man, turning to both his early life and army career before 1914, as well as his unstinting work on behalf of ex-servicemen's organizations after 1918. Finally, in this definitive biography, the man emerges from the myth.
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About Gary Mead
Reviews for The Good Soldier: The Biography of Douglas Haig
Allan Massie
Daily Telegraph
A subtle treatment of Haig's complex character... Mead's Haig is not a marble statue, nor a caricature butcher and bungler, but a man of very human strengths and weaknesses. The Good Soldier is the most successful attempt yet at disentangling the historical Douglas Haig from the twin excesses of Haigiography and donkeydom... Very readable.
Gary Sheffield
TLS
Engrossing... Here at last comes some redress for perhaps the most maligned of the principal actors in that tragedy [of] the First World War.
Mary Skipwith
Field