'There has been a lot of fighting hereabouts. The trenches have made themselves
rather than been made, and run inconsequently in and out of the big thirty-foot
high stacks of bricks; it is most confusing. The parapet of a trench which we
don't occupy is built up with ammunition boxes and corpses . . .' In one of the most honest and candid self-portraits ever committed to paper,
Robert Graves tells the extraordinary story of his experiences as a young
officer in the First World War. He describes life in the trenches in vivid, raw
detail, how the dehumanizing horrors he witnessed left him shell-shocked. They
were to haunt him for the rest of his life.