Description
pp. 246, “When Canada entered the First World War it was a largely rural, colonial nation, dependent socially and economically on the British Empire. By the war’s end, it had emerged as an independent, middle power ready to play a role on the world stage.
Far From Home, a companion to the mini-series of the same name, chronicles in a powerful and compelling way the vital role Canadians played in World War I and how events of the war, at home in the trenches, transformed the Canadian identity. It reveals the war through scores of original photographs, newspaper clippings, excerpts from letters and diaries, and quotes from hundreds of Canadians who lived through the nightmare experiences of the trenches. Award-winning author Bill Freeman and acclaimed filmmaker Richard Nielsen unravel the war from several points of view – the political leadership, the military strategists, the women in the factories on the home front, and the soldiers in the trenches. Beginning with the naive optimism of Canadians as they prepared for war and moving through the feelings of despair as the infantry faced the horrors of trench warfare, Freeman and Nielsen demonstrate how Canadian troops by war’s end developed into the “shock troops” of the war – and played a significant role in the allied victory.
Too few Canadians today have an appreciation of the major contribution that this country made to the First World War and how that was shaped the Canada we know today. For Canadians of all ages, Far From Home provides a powerful and moving account of this nation’s contributions to WWI and fascinating insights into the pivotal nature of the war to our history.”