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Marching as to War: Canada's Turbulent Years

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Canada coming of age through wartime trials

This is a great pick if you like history that feels vivid and human rather than distant and ceremonial. Pierre Berton makes Canada’s early wars feel like a national coming-of-age story, moving between soldiers, generals, politicians, and families with real immediacy. It’s especially rewarding for readers who want to understand not just what happened, but how war helped shape Canada’s identity.

Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.
Just Arrived

Marching as to War: Canada's Turbulent Years

Regular price $11.90
Unit price
per
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ISBN: 9780385258197
Authors: Pierre Berton
Publisher: Anchor Canada
Date of Publication: 2002-09-24
Format: Paperback
Related Collections: Politics, History
Goodreads rating: 4.18
(rated by 263 readers)

Description

I have called this period Canada's Turbulent Years - turbulent not only because of the battles we fought on the African veldt, the ravaged meadows of Flanders, the forbidding spine of Italy, and the conical hills of Korea, but turbulent in other ways. These were Canada's formative years, when she resembled an adolescent, grappling with the problems of puberty, often at odds with her parents, craving to be treated as an adult, hungry for the acclaim of her peers, and wary of the dominating presence of a more sophisticated neighbour. From the Introduction Canada's twentieth century can be divided roughly into two halves. All the wars and all the unnecessary battles in which Canadian youth was squandered belong to the first -- from the autumn of 1899 to the summer of 1953. From the mid-1950s on, Canada has concerned itself not with war but with peace. The first war of the century, which took Canadian soldiers to South Africa, and the last, which sent them to Korea, bracket the bookends on the shelf of history. They have a good deal in common with, these two minor conflicts, whose chronicles pale when compared to the bloodbaths of the two world wars. Canada's wartime days are long past, and for many, the scars of war have healed. Vimy has been manicured clean, its pockmarked slopes softened by a green mantle of Canadian pines. Dieppe has reverted to a resort town, its beaches long since washed free of Canadian blood. Nowadays, Canadians are proud of their role as Peacekeepers, from which they have gained a modicum of international acclaim the nation has always craved, with precious little blood wasted in the process. In this monumental work, Pierre Berton brings Canadian history to life once again, relying on a host of sources, including newspaper accounts and first-hand reports, to tell the story of these four wars through the eyes of the privates in the trenches, the generals at the front, and the politicians and families back home.
 

Canada coming of age through wartime trials

This is a great pick if you like history that feels vivid and human rather than distant and ceremonial. Pierre Berton makes Canada’s early wars feel like a national coming-of-age story, moving between soldiers, generals, politicians, and families with real immediacy. It’s especially rewarding for readers who want to understand not just what happened, but how war helped shape Canada’s identity.

Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.