Now It Can Be Told (Edition2024), 9789364281652
Paperback
WWI’s brutal truth revealed: A journalist’s unflinching eyewitness account.

Now It Can Be Told (Edition2024)

$67.16

  • Paperback

    486 pages

  • Release Date

    21 May 2024

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Summary

Now It Can Be Told by Philip Gibbs is a memoir. The genre is war journalism and memoir. Philip Gibbs, a British journalist and one of five officially sanctioned war correspondents during World War I, provides a detailed, unvarnished account of the war’s grim realities.

The book captures the stark horror of trench warfare, the psychological toll on soldiers, and the pervasive disillusionment among the troops. Gibbs writes with a poignant honesty, describing the harrowing exper…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9789364281652
ISBN-10:9364281659
Author:Philip Gibbs
Publisher:Double 9 Books LLP
Imprint:Double 9 Books LLP
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:486
Release Date:21 May 2024
Weight:612g
Dimensions:216mm x 140mm x 27mm
About The Author

Philip Gibbs

Sir Philip Armand Hamilton Gibbs KBE was an English journalist and prolific author who served as one of the five official British reporters during World War I. His siblings A. Hamilton Gibbs, Francis Hamilton Gibbs, Helen Hamilton Gibbs, and Cosmo Hamilton, as well as his father Henry James Gibbs and his own son Anthony, were all writers. Gibbs, the son of a government servant, was born in Kensington, London, and his name was registered as Philip Amande Thomas. He had a home education and decided at a young age to pursue a career as a writer. Gibbs was a Roman Catholic. His first piece appeared in the Daily Chronicle in 1894, and five years later, he released the first of many volumes, Founders of the Empire. He was appointed literary editor of Alfred Harmsworth’s main (and expanding) tabloid-format daily, the Daily Mail. He also worked for several big newspapers, including the Daily Express. His first attempt at semi-fiction, The Street of Adventure, was published in 1909 and told the story of the official Liberal Party journal Tribune, which was created in 1906 but failed dramatically in 1908. Franklin Thomasson, Leicester’s MP from 1906 to 1910, created the paper at great expenditure.

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