商品簡介
An advertising illustrator and artist by trade, Private Fergus Mackain enlisted in 1915 to ‘do his bit', serving in France when the fighting was at its fiercest. After being wounded on the Somme and taken out of front line duty in 1917, he turned to designing humorous postcards for soldiers to send to their families at home. These color postcards reflected a lighthearted and ironic fashion the reality of life in the trenches for the ordinary Tommy. His ‘Sketches of Tommy's Life in France' and other cards are unique as they chronicle in accurate detail both his own life and the lives of all the ‘ordinary' soldiers who fought in that momentous struggle. Largely forgotten today, Mackain's sketches are a vital document of real life in the trenches, the joys of the rum ration, the cacophony of the artillery barrage or being stuck in a shell hole knee deep in water. John Place, (whose own grandfather fought on the Somme) and William Mackain-Bremner (grandson of Fergus's cousin) have collected together for the first time all the extant postcards drawn by Mackain together with contextualizing commentary to the Western Front scenes depicted. Also included are reproductions of actual messages sent during the war on the back of Mackain's postcards. Includes over 200 color illustrations.
作者簡介
Fergus Mackain was born in Canada to an English father and lived in New York with his young family working as an illustrator for an ad agency. Demobbed in 1918 he lived in England for several years before returning to his family. William Mackain-Bremner lives in Texas and grew up in a British army family. John Place is a teacher.