The Christmas Match: Football in No Man's Land 1914 - WWI Historical Documentary & True Story - Perfect for History Buffs, Military Enthusiasts, and Christmas Gift Ideas
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DESCRIPTION
On Christmas Eve, 1914, after four months of intense, bloody fighting in Flanders between entrenched British and German soldiers, something miraculous happened. The guns fell silent as Christmas approached, and the soldiers on both sides started singing instead of shooting. Then, on Christmas Day, the two sides emerged from their trenches and met in No Man’s Land. Some chased rabbits. Others, more memorably, played soccer. It was a rare moment of peace—and even beauty—amid horrible carnage.The Christmas Match tells that story through the eyes of two soldiers—Albert Schmidt, a Saxon, and Jimmy Coyle, a Scot—who were in units that played a Christmas Day match against each other. Pehr Thermaenius traces their stories through military archives, taking the pair from mobilization in August to the frozen mud of Flanders in December, showing the making of soldiers, the traumas of war, and the emergence—brief, but real—of hope within that Christmas Day sporting truce. A brilliantly realized account of an unforgettable moment in European history, The Christmas Match is history at its up-close, deeply human best.
REVIEWS
****** - Verified Buyer
4.5
I was a child in the 2nd WW and am still interested about the history of the 1st one. I like the way this book is written. Easily understandable for regular people.Some years ago I was at Vimy Ridge and there II really felt the impact of enormous price that was paid by all those, mostly very young, people who died in that war, {for peace for the coming generations?}. When I found out about this book, I had to know what it was about. During WW2 I lived in the Netherlands and know about fear of bombing, being shot and being very hungry because there was hardly anything to eat. People like my Father were "volunteered" to work in German factories. I still feel very emotional when I think of all this..The fifth star Is for the quality of the photographs in the book, although I know that It is not easy to get good quality pictureson the paperback paper. Overall, I find it a well written. Anna Rowe
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