by Richard Van Emden (Author), Harry Patch (Author)
Harry Patch, the last British soldier alive to have fought in the trenches of the First World War, is now 108 years old and one of very few people who can directly recall the horror of that conflict. Harry vividly remembers his childhood in the Somerset countryside of Edwardian England. He left school in 1913 to become an apprentice plumber but three years later was conscripted, serving as a machine gunner in the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry. Fighting in the mud and trenches during the Battle of Passchendaele, he saw a great many of his comrades die, and in one dreadful moment the shell that wounded him kill his three closest friends. In vivid detail he describes daily life in the trenches, the terror of being under intense artillery fire, and the fear of going over the top. Then, after the Armistice, the soldiers' frustration at not being quickly demobbed led to a mutiny in which Harry was soon caught up. The Second World War saw Harry in action on the home front as a fire-fighter during the bombing of Bath. He also warmly describes his friendship with American GIs preparing to go to France, and, years later, his tears when he saw their graves. Late in life Harry achieved fame, meeting the Queen and taking part in the BBC documentary The Last Tommies, finally shaking hands with a German veteran of the artillery and speaking out frankly to Prime Minister Tony Blair about the soldiers shot for cowardice in the First World War. The Last Fighting Tommy is the story of an ordinary man's extraordinary life.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: Export & airside ed
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 06 Aug 2007
ISBN 10: 0747594015
ISBN 13: 9780747594017
Book Overview: Harry Patch and Richard van Emden will do author publicity together at the time of publication The book will be published to coincide with the 90th anniversary of the Battle of Paschendaele (July 1917) Harry Patch was the pre-eminent interviewee in BBC1's two-part tribute to the veterans of the Great War, 'Tommies' (2005).