Firing Lines

Three Canadian Women Write the First World War

Livre numérique

Read between the front lines: The stories of three Canadian female journalists stationed in England and France during the First World War.

Europe: 1914–18. Mary MacLeod Moore, a writer for Saturday Night Magazine, covered the war’s impact on women, from the munitions factories to the kitchens of London’s tenements. Beatrice Nasmyth, a writer for the Vancouver Province, managed the successful wartime political campaign of Canadian Roberta MacAdams and attended the Versailles Peace Conference as Premier Arthur Sifton’s press secretary. Elizabeth Montizambert was in France during the war and witnessed the suffering of its people first-hand. She was often near the fighting, serving as a canteen worker and writing about her experiences for the Montreal Gazette.

The reportage from these three women presents an insightful, moving, funny, and compelling body of observations of a devastating conflict, from underrepresented points of view. Firing Lines is based on the letters, articles, and books they wrote, as well as the records of those who knew them. The book offers a fresh perspective on a war that touched nearly every Canadian family and changed our sense of ourselves as a nation.

Table des matières

Table des matières
Cover 1
Copyright 5
Contents 8
Foreword 10
Prologue 16
Part 1 22
Chapter 1 24
Chapter 2 39
Chapter 3 55
Part 2 74
Chapter 4 76
Chapter 5 98
Chapter 6 124
Chapter 7 152
Chapter 8 171
Chapter 9 184
Part 3 202
Chapter 10 204
Chapter 11 221
Chapter 12 248
Afterword 272
Acknlowledgements 276
Notes 278
Bibliography 300
Image Credits 304
Index 306

Compléments