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Mud, Blood, and Silence

Inside the Daily Terror and Humanity of the First World War Trenches

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Mud, Blood, and Silence

De: Cyril Marlen
Narrado por: Erin B Clark
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A century later, the Western Front still speaks—through sodden earth, shattered timber, and the letters of ordinary men who endured the unendurable. Mud, Blood, and Silence is a visceral, human-scale portrait of trench life in the First World War, told not through grand strategy or shifting front lines, but through the cramped inches where millions lived, fought, and waited. It is the story of mud that swallowed boots and hope, blood that seeped into the chalky soil of France and Belgium, and the terrible, watchful silence between bombardments when every heartbeat felt like a countdown.

Cyril Marlen guides you down fire steps and along duckboards slick with rain, into dugouts lit by guttering candles, and out across No Man’s Land under a black sky cut by flares. Drawing on soldiers’ routines and realities, he shows how a modern industrial war forced human beings into medieval spaces—narrow trenches, sandbag walls, and timbered shelters—while surrounding them with the machine age’s deadliest inventions. What emerges is a daily rhythm of endurance: stand-to at dawn, repairs and fatigues, ration parties at night, and the constant threat of shells, snipers, gas, and collapse.

Each chapter focuses on one essential element of trench existence, turning statistics into lived experience:

  • Living in the Mud and Water: the weight, drag, and danger of earth turned to glue.
  • Rats and Vermin: fearless scavengers fattened on rations and the unthinkable.
  • Disease and Trench Foot: the body’s slow surrender to cold, damp, and infection.
  • Shells and Snipers: sudden violence that erased men mid-sentence.
  • The Smell: a thick, inescapable mix of smoke, sweat, decay, and chemicals.
  • No Rest: sleep stolen in minutes, nerves frayed by tremors of distant guns.
  • Food: bully beef, hard biscuits, and tea brewed in tins—monotonous, vital, insufficient.
  • Boredom and Terror: hours of waiting punctured by seconds of panic.
  • Shell Shock: minds buckling under noise, loss, and endless anticipation.
  • Death and Injury: stretcher-bearers in the dark, the long walk to clearing stations.

Marlen refuses to let his subjects become faceless. He shows how humor, ritual, and small comforts—songs, shared cigarettes, a photograph wrapped in oilcloth—kept men tethered to themselves. He traces the quiet heroism of runners and stretcher-bearers, the ingenuity of trench carpenters and signallers, the stubborn dignity of men who shaved in icy water and polished boots in a world of mud. He explores how fear and compassion mingled at the parapet, how letters bridged the distance to home, and how silence—after the guns—could be more terrifying than noise.

This is not a tour of battles; it is a map of endurance. Without sentimentality, Mud, Blood, and Silence restores texture and temperature to the Great War’s most enduring image. It explains why trenches became necessary, how they worked, and what they did to bodies and minds. It also asks what was salvaged in that narrow world: camaraderie, duty, stubborn hope.

The final words bring the listener to the war’s end and beyond, tracing the long shadow of trench experience—on survivors who carried the front home in their lungs and dreams, and on landscapes where poppies still bloom over old lines. In doing so, the book argues that to understand the First World War, you must stand—just for a moment—where those men stood: ankle-deep in water, eyes on the parapet, waiting for the next order, the next shell, the next dawn.

Mud, Blood, and Silence is for listeners who want the truth of trench life without myth or melodrama: immediate, intimate, and unforgettable.

©2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2025 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK
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