Pages: 272 (Hardcover) ISBN: 1845132203 Pub: Aurum Press Ltd Pub date: 2007-02-20 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 69715
|
|
![]() ![]()
Reader Reviews:A very high standard of research. (3/3 people found this helpful)I found this book to be an excellent read on a subject rarely tackled. Not since Following The Drum by Brigadier Page in 1986 (covering the Peninsular War)have I seen a work of this standard, with its exceptional detailed research which probes the lives of the simple camp followers as well as the well healed good and the great of all nations involved. I like also the accuracy of dates and events of the campaign, an aspect which I have found to be lacking in many recent publications. This book will appeal to a very wide range of readers and not just students of 19th century conflicts. A New Classic on the Crimean War (4/4 people found this helpful)It is hard to list the superlatives of this book. Helen Rappaport has exceptional writing and research skills. The result is a book which is a fascinating read, while simultaneously providing a wealth of information for the research historian. Where former books in this genre provided a few well known stories of British heroines, Ms. Rappaport has provided a much more extensive account to include stories of the bravery and heroic actions of the French and Russian women that were present. She tells her tale with praiseworthy objectivity, so that even Florence Nightingale and Mary Seacole are not portrayed as plaster saints, but as living, breathing persons. In weaving her tale, the author has not only provided the story of the women of the war, but an excellent, concise history of the war itself. Destined to be a new classic on the war! No Place for Ladies (7/7 people found this helpful)This quiet book is dynamite - a groundbreaking account of what the women got up to in one of the most iconic wars ever fought by Britain, and in many ways a precursor to the First World War in its sheer mismanagement and negligence. Women were there to pick up the pieces, and many of them died in the process. Others you'll never see in the same light again: Florence Nightingale, a control freak and ambitious, bad-tempered administrator; Mary Seacole, the Creole Jamaican with shoulders broad enough to conquer every adversity and still have heart enough left to comfort despairing and injured men in a place bleaker than anywhere. There were the hapless lovelorn ones who were abandoned on lonely beaches weeping; the loyal ones who just simply died with their men (you can't help wondering why - did they really have no homes to go to?); the aristocrats who loved their horses and their flirting; the busy, enterprising ones who set up businesses wherever they went. Children didn't stand much of a chance; but the fact that any women came through at all is miracle enough.
Similar ProductsMrs Duberly's War: Journal and Letters from the Crimea, 1854-1856 The Crimean War (War Correspondents) The Crimean War: Queen Victoria's War with the Russian Tsars The Crimean War: The Truth Behind the Myth Eyewitness in the Crimea: The Crimean War Letters of Lt.Col.George Frederick Dallas, 1854-1856 CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Europe -> Enlightenment, Revolution & Empire 1751-1900
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Britain & Ireland -> Crimean War Books -> Subjects -> History -> General Books -> Subjects -> Society, Politics & Philosophy -> Women’s Studies Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Hardcover uk-shops -> Education Resources -> Books -> Social Sciences -> Gender Studies -> Women
|