Description
The first in-depth examination of Canadian conscripts in the final battles of the Great War, Reluctant Warriors provides fresh evidence that conscripts were good soldiers who fought valiantly and made a crucial contribution to the success of the Canadian Corps in 1918.
About the Author
Patrick M. Dennis is a retired Canadian Air Force colonel who served abroad for over twenty-two years, including tours as Canada's deputy military representative to the NATO Military Committee in Brussels, Belgium, and as the Canadian defence attache to Israel. He is a graduate of the United States Armed Forces Staff College and the NATO Defence College and holds a master's degree in communication from the University of Northern Colorado. In 1986, he was invested by Governor-General Jeanne Sauve as an Officer in the Order of Military Merit. After leaving the military, he lectured on global political-military affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University and was a part-time instructor with the Canadian Forces College, Toronto, specializing in command and management and the law of armed conflict. Currently, he is an adjunct associate with the Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies.
Reviews
Patrick M. Dennis's Reluctant Warriors, another compelling entry in the UBC Press/Canadian War Museum Studies in Canadian Military History series, is a topical and long overdue examination of a fascinating chapter of Canada's Great War experience ... The work has immense emotional resonance, a welcome change from the detachment so common to operational history, buttressed by the author's personal connection to the story ... Reluctant Warriors is ... a cri de coeur that demolishes old assumptions about conscripts in combat and provides an important contribution to the larger question of what Canada gained - and lost - in the First World War.
-- Andrew Theobald, author of The Bitter Harvest of War: New Brunswick and the Conscription Crisis of 1917 * Conference of Defence Associations Institute *[Reluctant Warriors] takes aim at oft-repeated tales characterizing conscripts as shirkers and malingerers who arrived too late and with too little training to contribute in any meaningful way to the war effort. Dennis provides a corrective, proving that draftees were a significant stream of reinforcements during periods when casualty rates kept Canadian units chronically understrength... this book really shines when it mines the personal testimony of the conscripts.
-- Will Pratt, Mount Royal College * Prairie History *This is a first-rate book, well written and coherent. It is very readable and I recommend it to both serious scholars of the war and to the casual historian. -- Colonel (Ret'd) Keith Maxwell, Canadian Army and Air Force & NATO International Staff * Conference of Defence Associations Institute *
Patrick Dennis has provided a well-researched study that should be an important part of any intellectual discussion on the Canadian First World War experience.
-- David Borys, University of British Columbia * Canadian Military History, Vol 27, Issue 2 *Reluctant Warriors: Canadian Conscripts and the Great War, another compelling entry in the UBC Press/Canadian War Museum Studies in Canadian Military History series, is a topical and long overdue examination of a fascinating chapter of Canada's Great War experience. -- Andrew Theobald, author of The Bitter Harvest of War: New Brunswick and the Conscription Crisis of 1917 * Stand To! The Journal of the Western Front Association, No. 113 *
Book Information
ISBN 9780774835985
Author Patrick M. Dennis
Format Paperback
Page Count 332
Imprint University of British Columbia Press
Publisher University of British Columbia Press