In four and a half years of fighting on the Western Front during the First World War a few battles stand out from the rest. They had a decisive impact on the course of the conflict, and they still define the war for us today. For the French, the Battle of Verdun, fought between February and December 1916, was one of the greatest of these. That is why the selection of contemporary photographs Ian Sumner has brought together for this volume in the Images of War series is so important and revealing. They show the strained, sometimes shocked faces of the soldiers, record the shattered landscape in which they fought, and give us an insight into the sheer intensity of the fighting. At the time, and ever since, the battle has been portrayed as a triumph of French tenacity and heroism that is encapsulated in the famous phrase 'They shall not pass'. These photographs remind us, in the most graphic way, what that slogan meant in terms of the devastating personal experience of the men on the Verdun battlefield. AUTHOR: Ian Sumner is a prolific writer and researcher who specialises in local and military history. He has made a particular study of the French army and air force during the First World War. SELLING POINTS: ? Photographic history of one of the great battles of the First World War ? Over 150 previously unpublished wartime photographs showing each stage of the fighting ? Graphic insight into the experience of the soldiers in the front line ? Unforgettable images of the Verdun forts and battlefield ? Published to mark the centenary of the battle 180 photos