Elizabeth Greenhalgh is a QE II Research Fellow (Australian Research Council), based in the University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Canberra. She has published a large number of refereed articles on aspects of the Great War, and is the author of Victory through Coalition: Britain and France during the First World War (Cambridge, 2005). In 2007 this book won the accolade of a Choice magazine Outstanding Academic Title. In 2011 she published Foch in Command: The Forging of a First World War General (Cambridge, 2011) and a French translation appeared in September 2013. For many years she was editor of War and Society, the international peer-reviewed military history journal. She has considerable experience of working in French and other European archives, and has presented papers on the First World War at conferences in Australia, Britain, France, Canada and the United States. Currently she is working on a study of 1918 analysing, as its title states, How the Allies Won.
Introduction
1. The pre-war army
2. 1914: from the frontiers to Flanders
3. 1915: on the offensive
4. 1916: Verdun and the Somme
5. General Nivelle and his 1917 offensive
6. Restoring the Army
7. 1918: German offensives
8. The path to victory
9. Armistices and demobilisation
10. From 1914 to 1919: aux armes, citoyens!
Bibliographic essay
Index.