Antong the boolcs dealing with particular battles or campaigns are the following: French, Viscount John D. P., (1914) (Boston and Lon don 1919), defends his conduct of the war; Ferris, C. H., 'The Campaign of 1914 in France and Belgium) (New York and L,ondon 1915); Simonds, Frank H., (They Shall not Pass' (Garden City 1916), on the first weeks of the Battle of Verdun; Henry, (The Battle of Verdun' (transE.YdA. Holt, New York 1917), deals with events from 21 February to 7 May; Buchan, John, (The Battle of the Somme; First Phase) (New York and London 1917); Whitton, Frederick E, (The Marne Campaign" (Boston and London 1917); Mc Gill, Patrick, (The Great Push) (New York 1916), on the batde of Loos; Christian-Froge, R., (Mod:range et les Marsoins en Lorraine) (Paris 1917); Monseigneur Tissier, Eveque de Chidons, (La guerre en Champagne au diocese de °Alone (Paris 1916), vivid description of actual war in a small locality.
On the war in Belgium consuh the follow ing: Whitlock, Brand, (Belgium' (2 vols, New York 1919); Gerlache de Gomery, A. V. J. de, (Belgium in War Times) (trans. by B. Miail, lb. 1918); Waxweiler, Emile, (Belgium Neutral and Loyal: the War of 1914) (ib. 1915); Mokveld, L, (The German Fury in Belgium) (trans. by C Thieme, New York and London 1917), by a Dutch. newspaper corre spondent; KtDog, Vernon L., (Fighting Starva tion in Belgium) (Garden City 1918); and Hunt, Edward Eyre, (War Bread) (New York 1916), on the work of the Hoover Commission in Belgium.
Many books appeared that attempted to interpret the war or to account for it. Some of them were niete expressions of indignation or partisanship; but others were serious and re strained. Of the latter class were the follow ing: Muir, Ramsay, (Britain's Case against Germiany) (New York and London 1914); Craenb, John A., (Germany and England) (New York 1914); Millioud, Maurice, (The Ruling Caste arid Frenzied Trade in Germany) (Bos ton and London 1916) ; (The Oxford Pamphlets on die War, 1914-15) (New York and Oxford University 1914-), by Oxford professors; Ox ford Faculty of Modern History, 'Wiry we are at War) (New York and London 1914) ; Beck, J. M., (The Evidence in the Case) (New York 1914), an impassioned examination of the diploinatic evidence of Germany's responsibility for the war; Cheredame, Andr6, (The Pan German Plot Unmasked) (New York and Lon don 1916), widely read at the time of publica tion; Swope, Hoary B., (Inside the German Empire) (New York 1917), conditions in Ger many during the last three months of 1916; Ackerman, Carl, (Gertnany, the Next Republic) (ib. 1917), described forces that were leading
Germany to discard autocracy; Cobb, Irving S., (Speaking of Prussians' (ib. 1917), serious views of Prussituas as the author found them; Morgan. J. H., (trans.), (War Book of the German General Staff) (New York and London 1915), a literal translation of Germany's official (Usages of War on Land); Dominian, Leon. (The Frontiers of Language and Nationality in Europe) (New York 1917); Fried, Alfred H., 'The Restoration of Europe' (trans. by L. S. Gannett, New York 1916), German argument ast militarism; Wallace, William (trans.), (rn Germany in Relation to the Great War) (ib. 1916), essays by 17 German pro fessors, appeals to American opinion; Francke, Kuno, (A Gertnan-Amerkan's Confession of Faith) (ib. 1915), a moderate statement of the ether side; Mach, Bchnund R. Otto von, 'What Gerntany Wants' (Boston 1914); id, (Ger many's Point of View) (Chicago 1915), by one of the more reasonable of the German propa gandists; Villard, Oswald G., (Germany EM battled: An Interpretation) (New York 1915), opposed to militarisrn but sympathetic with the German people; Naumann, Friedrich, (Central Europe) (trans. by C M. Mere dith, New York and London 1917), the hope's, of the Pan-Germans; Freytag-Loring hoven, Hugo F. P. J., Freiherr von, (Deductions from the World War) (ib. 1918), glorifies militarism, written to preserve the hold of the military party on the popular mind in Ger many while the war was at iU worst stage; and Wetter16, Emile, (Behind the Sc.enes in the Reichstag) (trans. from French by G. F. Lees, New York 19LS), by an Alsatian representa tive of the Reichstag who sympathized with France.
On the Serbian campaigns consult, besides the chapters in Buchan's (Nelson's History of the War,) the following swial books: Gordon Smith, Gordon, (Through the Serbian Cam paign) (London 1916); Jones, Fortier, (With the Serbs into Exile,) (New York 1916); Askew, Alice and Claude, (The Stricken Land: Serbia as we saw it' (New York and London 1916); Krunich, Milutin, (Serbia Crucified) (Boston 1918); Reis, Rodolphe A., (Comment les Anstro-Hongrois ont fait la spurn en Serbie) (Paris 1915); Thompson, Louis L, (La Retraite de Serbie) (ib. 1916); Barby, Henry, (La gnerre mondiale avec l'annee Serbe) (ib. 1918) ; and Gibbons, Herbert Adams, (The New Map of Europe) (New York 1914), on Serbia's relation to the outbreak of the war.