Smithsonian world war 1 book
R.G. Grant "Smithsonian World War I: The Definitive Visual History from Sarajevo to Versailles" Deluxe Limited Edition, Leather Bound Collector's Edition [Sealed]
A Deluxe Leather Bound Limited Edition
Easton Press/DK Publishing, Norwalk CT. 2000 "Smithsonian World War I: The Definitive Visual History from Sarajevo to Versailles" by R.G. Grant. Luxuriously bound in packed genuine leather. Limited Edition. Sealed without any visible flaws.
Book Dimensions: 12" x 10" x 1 1/2"
World War I: The Definitive Visual History takes you from the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand to the Treaty of Versailles. Experience some of the most prominent battles, such as the Somme and Verdun, through compelling direct accounts from soldiers who fought as well as civilians who lived through the First World War. Get a close-up view of the striking weaponry and equipment used throughout the war in photographic galleries and learn more about the key people, including David Lloyd George and Joseph Joffre.
Each chapter begins with a map and visual timeline to set the scene for the events to follow, highlighting when, where, and why things happened and changed history as they d
Horace Pippin memoir of his experiences in World War I, ca. 1921
Item Information
Title: Horace Pippin memoir of his experiences in World War I
Date: ca. 1921
Physical Details: Manuscript : 62 p. : handwritten, ill. ; 22 x 18 cm.
Description: Pippin recounts his World War I experiences in detail from the time he left the United States on November 17th, 1917 with the 15th N.Y. Infantry for France. Pages 37-40 have been removed.
Includes illustrations in color of soldiers and battles.
Creator: Pippin, Horace, 1888-1946
Forms part of: Horace Pippin notebooks and letters, circa 1920, 1943
Rights Statement: Current copyright status is undetermined
Citation Information: Horace Pippin. Horace Pippin memoir of his experiences in World War I, ca. 1921. Horace Pippin notebooks and letters, circa 1920, 1943. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
Digital ID: 7434
World War I: The Definitive Visual History
Review
The folks at DK have almost single-handedly rejuvenated if not reinvented the often moribund world of non-fiction books for children. [Eyewitness series] (Newsweek) ...a mini museum between the covers of a book. [Eyewitness series] (The New York Times) These books' striking visual impact will draw in even the most casual readers. [Eyewitness series] (School Library Journal)
About the Author
DK was founded in London in 1974 and is now the world's leading illustrated reference publisher and part of Penguin Random House, formed on July 1, 2013. DK publishes highly visual, photographic nonfiction for adults and children. DK produces content for consumers in over 87 countries and in 62 languages, with offices in Delhi, London, Melbourne, Munich, New York, and Toronto. DK's aim is to advise, enrich, and entertain readers of all ages, and everything DK publishes, whether print or digital, embodies the unique DK plan approach. DK brings unrivalled clarity to a wide range of topics with a unique combination of words and pictures, lay together to spectacular effect. We have a reputation for innovation in design for both produce and d
The Most Loved and Hated Novel About World War I
An international bestseller, Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front was banned and burned in Nazi Germany
On December 5, 1930, just over 12 years after the end of World War I, German moviegoers flocked to Berlin’s Mozart Hall to look one of Hollywood’s latest films. But during the movie, a cadre of 150 Nazi Brownshirts, nearly all too young to have fought in World War I, were led into the theater by propagandist Joseph Goebbels. Spewing anti-Semitic invective at the screen, they repeatedly shouted “Judenfilm!” as they tossed stink bombs from the balcony, threw sneezing powder in the air, and released colorless mice into the theater. A somewhat shocking turn of events, considering the movie was the highly anticipated adaptation of countryman Erich Maria Remarque’s novel All Quiet on the Western Front, the blockbuster novel that had transfixed the nation months earlier.
First serialized in 1928 in the German newspaper Vossische Zeitunghe, the book was published on January 31, 1929, and instantly became a literary juggernaut. In Germany, the initial print run sold out on release day, and some 20,000 copies
Five Books on World War I
World War I: 100 Years Later
A Smithsonian magazine special report
Military history, memoir, and even a novelized series make this list of can’t-miss books about the Fantastic War
On the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, an armistice between Allied forces and Germany put an end to the fighting of what was then referred to as the Great War. President Woodrow Wilson declared November 11, of the following year, Armistice Day. In 1938, an act of Congress made the day a legal holiday, and by 1954, that act was amended to design Veterans Day, to honor American veterans of all wars.
Journalist Adam Hochschild, author of To Conclude All Wars (2011), an account of World War I from the perspective of both hawks and doves in Great Britain, provides his picks of books to read to better perceive the conflict.
Hell’s Foundations (1992), by Geoffrey Moorhouse
Of the 84 British regiments that fought in the Gallipoli campaign in Turkey in 1915 and 1916, the Lancashire Fusiliers from Bury, in northern England, suffered the most casualties. The regiment lost 13,642 men in the war—1,816 in Gallipoli alone.
For journalist Geoffrey Moorhouse, th