

As the book describes in its a prologue section, Parisian Stephane-Yves Barroux found the book whilst walking through the city as two workmen were clearing out a building. However this is not the universally recognised trench warfare of the later war years but the free moving battles, and French and British rout, of the first months of the conflict. The book illustrates the war diary of an unnamed First World War French soldier as he is called up, leaves his family, travels to the front and is involved in battles with the Germans. While Cinebook have translated three of the aviation themed Biggles Raconte history titles as Cinebook Presents, it is good to see Phoenix Yard Books bringing Barroux’s Great War based On Les Aura! to English as Line Of Fire. In Review: Line Of Fire by Stephane-Yves BarrouxĪs more and more Franco-Belgian bandes dessinee albums are translated into English, the various English language publishers have largely ignored the non-fiction titles. Home › Comics › British Comics › British Comics - Graphic Novels › In Review: Line Of Fire by Stephane-Yves Barroux



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