SOLDIERS: Fighting Men's Lives, 1901–2001
Philip Ziegler, . . Knopf, $26 (352pp) ISBN 978-0-375-41206-6
Respected British historian Ziegler has alternated between writing biographies of historical movers and shakers, like Lord Mountbatten and King Edward VIII, and those of famed but essentially trivial personalities, like Lady Diana Cooper and Osbert Sitwell. His latest title is based on in-depth interviews with nine retired British soldiers, whose lives brush against history but are ultimately mundane. The soldiers live at the Royal Hospital Chelsea, an institution founded by King Charles II as a retreat for old or disabled soldiers and opened in 1692 by William and Mary. The Hospital is famed as one of London's most exquisite architectural treasures, designed by Sir Christopher Wren in the late 17th century in the grandiose style of Les Invalides in Paris. Yet Ziegler keeps the focus clearly on the modest soldiers' lives, their often harrowing military service and rather depressing later lives. There is plenty of stiff-upper-lipping here, such as a near-centenarian who "views his own future with wry resignation; very occasionally when he is feeling ill he will say, 'I think it's time I curled up....' " Ultimately, the lives described here end pathetically in cramped quarters; one soldier watches a video of
Reviewed on: 01/28/2002
Genre: Nonfiction
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