The Backwash of War: The Classic Account of a First World War Field-Hospital
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About this book
"War superb as it is is not necessarily a filtering process by which men and nations may be purified. Well there are many people to write you of the noble side the heroic side the exalted side. I must write you of what I have seen the other side the backwash." Ellen La Motte Volunteer Nurse May 4 1916 During World War One Ellen La Motte became one of the first American war nurses to volunteer to go to Europeand she witnessed its horrors firsthand as she worked near the Western front. Her controversial book which the US banned in 1918 vividly and graphically describes the "backwash of war": the dirty smelly lice- and disease-ridden bodies of the wounded French soldiers she cared for. They compose the human wreckage of highly organized and industrialized warfare. Sometimes cynical sometimes poignant La Mottes observations retain a freshness that makes for compelling reading. Arranged into 14 vignettes depicting typical events and scenes The Backwash of War paints a picture of that conflict that sadly still resonates powerfully today.
