![]() ![]() Men who shot at crows and men who raised orphaned doves. Hunters and conservationists, nature appreciators and those unmoved by a skylark’s song at the crack of dawn, amateurs and professionals. ![]() ![]() Lewis-Stempel draws from soldiers’ diaries, letters, memoirs and poetry to paint a broad-ranging picture of varied and sometimes contradictory experience. Plant life, insect life, birds, vermin, nuisances, all existed around and among the armies, and they were reassured, comforted, bothered, sickened by it, perceiving it through their own personal lenses as humans are wont to do. This is only one small facet of the soldier’s experience of non-human life on the front though. I really enjoyed this though, and it’s not really that much of a stretch to connect war and nature, especially a war in which animals were used and kept by the army itself – their ratting cats and terriers, their horses, mules, donkeys and camels, their messenger pigeons and dogs. Like, there have been so many millions of words lavished on WWI from every possible angle, every conceivable breadth and depth thoroughly mined for recording, remembering, analysing, hypothesising, learning. The intersection between British (mostly) soldiers in World War I and nature seemed almost fanciful when I picked this one up. ![]()
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