World war 1 autobiography of missing children
Nothing of Importance by Bernard Adams.
A person today could spend a lifetime poring over nothing but memoirs from the period and never hope to read all of them.
Eight months in the trenches with a 1st Royal Welsh Fusilier. Undertones of War by Edmund Blunden. The Somme by Gary Sheffield. Testament of Youth by Vera Brittain. A young woman and her entire generation are changed forever by The Great War. First published in a tiny print run in and now a classic account. Somme by Lyn Macdonald.
Based on vivid accounts of eyewitnesses and survivors. Goodbye to All That by Robert Graves. The bitter and haunting autobiography of British poet and novelist.
This work brings together her two volumes of autobiography, "A Fortunate Grandchild", which depicts the life of an ordinary family living in the shadow of World War I, .
Stand To by F. A diary from an Irish soldier who fought from May to the end of the war. Storm of Steel by Ernst Junger. The conflict through the eyes of a German soldier. Diaries, letters, war records, and poetry are woven together. An Onlooker in France by William Orpen.