1917

A year in the 20th century.

The outbreak of war at sea between the German and British navies extended the conflict to yet another front, where in February 1917 a critical escalation was brought about by Germany’s declaration of unrestricted submarine warfare. All merchant ships in the northern Atlantic – whether carrying military or civilian cargoes – were declared to be targets of the German submarine squadrons. The purpose of this offensive was to paralyse Atlantic shipping and to isolate Great Britain economically by cutting off its inexhaustible supply of commodities from over the seas. Th
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Summer
Anne's House of Dreams (Anne of Green Gables, #5)
Blizzard of Glass: The Halifax Explosion of 1917
Growth of the Soil
Parnassus on Wheels (Parnassus, #1)
His Last Bow (Sherlock Holmes, #8)
Mujong
The State and Revolution
The Lost Princess of Oz (Oz, #11)
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
The Yellow Wall-Paper
The Tree of Heaven
’Salem’s Lot
The White People and Other Weird Stories
Pulled Down
Peter Pan by J.M. BarrieThe Magic City by E. NesbitThe Emerald City of Oz by L. Frank BaumThe Patchwork Girl of Oz by L. Frank BaumThe Magic World by E. Nesbit
Children's Fantasy of the 1910s
20 books — 17 voters
No Safe Harbour by Julie LawsonTides of Honour by Genevieve GrahamBarometer Rising by Hugh MacLennanWho's a Scaredy-Cat! by Joan PayzantThe Birth House by Ami McKay
Halifax Explosion Fiction
30 books — 20 voters

Anne's House of Dreams by L.M. MontgomeryUnderstood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield FisherThe Lost Princess of Oz by L. Frank BaumSummer by Edith WhartonParnassus on Wheels by Christopher  Morley
Best Books 1917
27 books — 22 voters
As Bright as Heaven by Susan MeissnerIn the Shadow of Blackbirds by Cat WintersThe Pull of the Stars by Emma DonoghueThe Birth House by Ami McKayA Death-Struck Year by Makiia Lucier
1918 Flu Pandemic
95 books — 60 voters



Siegfried Sassoon
To The Warmongers I'm back again from hell With loathsome thoughts to sell; secrets of death to tell; And horrors from the abyss. Young faces bleared with blood sucked down into the mud, You shall hear things like this, Till the tormented slain Crawl round and once again, With limbs that twist awry Moan out their brutish pain, As the fighters pass them by. For you our battles shine With triumph half-divine; And the glory of the dead Kindles in each proud eye. But a curse is on my head, That ...more
Siegfried Sassoon, The War Poems

The leading authorities on the subject of revolutionary upheavals recognize three essentials for a revolution — using the word in its historical sense and not in its popular sense of “a Red plot”: a revolutionary situation, a revolutionary leadership, and a revolutionary act, a triple necessity admirably illustrated by the Leninist revolution in Russia in 1917, so admirably indeed that to the very great detriment of the revolutionary cause the brilliant opportunism which took full advantage o ...more
R.T. Clark

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