Book description
The Wet Flanders Plain was first published in 1929. It was in good
company for that year also saw the first publication of Erich Maria
Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, Robert Graves's Goodbye to
All That, Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms, R. C. Sherriff's
Journey's End and Ernst Junger's Storm of Steel. It doesn't suffer by
comparison. But it is different from them. Unlike almost all the Great
War classics this book isn't based on delayed recollection, it is more
immediate than that. In 1928, Henry Williamson and another unnamed
veteran revisited the battlefields of Flanders and Northern France. In
Williamson's own words he wanted to 'return to my old comrades . . .
to the brown, the treeless, the flat and grave-set plain of Flanders -
to the rolling, heat-miraged downlands of the Somme - for I am dead
with them, and they live in me again.' He wanted to be rid of the
'wraith of the war'. As he continued to be haunted by his experiences
as a soldier, and continued to write at length about the Great War in
both fiction and non-fiction works, it is doubtful if he was
successful in that but what he does give us is a memoir that, as one
reviewer put it, 'emerges from the mass of War books as the most
beautiful and the most terrible.'