
audiobook
by John Buchan, Sir Henry John Newbolt
This volume offers a sweeping, yet intimate, portrait of how the British Empire entered and fought the Great War. Beginning with a clear‑cut explanation of the tangled diplomatic tensions that sparked the conflict, it shows how Britain’s vast overseas holdings—India, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and countless colonies—were drawn into a war that seemed, at first, far from their shores. The narrative follows the decisions made in London, the mobilisation of troops and resources across continents, and the everyday experiences of soldiers and civilians alike as they grapple with a conflict of unprecedented scale.
Interwoven with vivid portraits of key military leaders and detailed maps, the book balances strategic analysis with human stories from the front lines, the navy, and the home front. Its thoughtful prose brings the era’s political calculations, logistical challenges, and quiet acts of service to life, inviting listeners to understand the empire’s complex role in a war that reshaped the world.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (295K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-07-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1875–1940
Best known for the breathless suspense of The Thirty-Nine Steps, he brought a rare mix of adventure, public service, and historical imagination to his writing. His books move quickly, but they also reflect a life spent close to politics, war, and the wider British world.
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1862–1938
Best known for stirring patriotic and nautical verse, this English writer also worked as a novelist, historian, and public voice for literature and education. His poems once captured the mood of late Victorian and early 20th-century Britain, and several remain widely remembered.
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by John Buchan

by John Buchan

by John Buchan

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by John Buchan

by John Buchan

by John Buchan

by John Buchan