Bombers' Training, and Application of Same in Trench Warfare by Ferris

(9 User reviews)   2001
Ferris, J. R., Lieutenant Ferris, J. R., Lieutenant
English
Ever wonder what it was really like to be a soldier in the muddy, chaotic trenches of World War I? Not the sweeping battles you see in movies, but the gritty, terrifying, and weirdly technical day-to-day? That's exactly what Lieutenant J.R. Ferris gives us in 'Bombers' Training, and Application of Same in Trench Warfare'. Forget the generals' maps; this is a field manual written from the mud up. It’s a how-to guide for a job no one wanted: the bomber, the man who had to get close enough to an enemy trench to throw a grenade by hand. Ferris breaks down the brutal, step-by-step training and tactics with chilling clarity. Reading it feels less like studying history and more like finding a soldier's secret notebook. It’s a raw, unfiltered look at the strange mix of science and savagery that defined life and death on the front lines. If you think you know about trench warfare, this book will show you the terrifying details you missed.
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Lieutenant J.R. Ferris’s book isn't a novel. You won't find a main character or a plot twist. Instead, it's a direct, practical manual written during World War I. It was meant to train soldiers for one of the war's most dangerous and intimate jobs: being a 'bomber'—the soldier specializing in grenade warfare.

The Story

The 'story' here is the grim reality of trench combat. Ferris walks the reader through everything a bomber needed to know. He starts with the absolute basics: how to safely carry a bag of grenades, how to pull the pin, and the precise arm motion for an effective throw. He diagrams attack formations, showing how small squads of bombers would work together to clear enemy trench sections. He talks about building bombing posts, defending against enemy bombers, and the brutal, close-quarters chaos of a trench raid. The entire book is a cold, systematic breakdown of how to survive and kill in a space often no wider than a hallway.

Why You Should Read It

This book is powerful because it strips away all romance. There are no heroic charges here, just stressed diagrams of where to stand so you don't blow up your own men. The value is in that shocking practicality. You feel the weight of the grenade bag, the tension of waiting for the right second to throw, and the horrific efficiency of the tactics. It makes the war feel real in a way big-picture histories sometimes don't. Reading Ferris’s calm instructions for life-or-death situations gives you a deep, unsettling respect for the soldiers who had to learn and use this knowledge every day.

Final Verdict

This isn't for everyone. If you're looking for a narrative history or personal stories, look elsewhere. But if you're a history buff, a military enthusiast, or anyone fascinated by the raw, mechanical details of the past, this is a goldmine. It's perfect for readers who loved books like 'All Quiet on the Western Front' and want to understand the actual 'how' behind the horror. Think of it as the ultimate primary source—a survival guide from hell, written by someone who was there.

William Davis
1 year ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

Mary Wilson
1 year ago

Not bad at all.

Donald King
6 months ago

Just what I was looking for.

Jackson Smith
11 months ago

Perfect.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (9 User reviews )

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