Though a century has passed since the First World War, many in Ireland are discovering its remarkable and continuing legacy for the first time. They are learning that for many on this island it was our war and is our story. Ronan McGreevys book helps the ongoing unpacking of that complex story. It is a very opportune and important addition to the growing body of scholarly literature on the Irish in the Great War. Ronan focuses on the monuments the war left behind, providing a useful guide for the growing numbers of visitors to those foreign fields where so many young Irish and many other lives were lost and from where home-coming survivors, for the rest of their lives carried grim memories often too raw to share. -- Mary McAleese, President of Ireland 1997-2011
The superlative and definitive account of Ireland in World War I -- The Irish Independent
The best of books are those which you never wish to finish and put down. Perhaps even finer are those works which upon finishing you know will return for the magic of its authorship and its content. This is one of the latter. -- David Filsell
Its a great read. And, unlike many tomes about that war, its an easy read. Highly recommended. -- Paddy Murray
My colleagues passion for his subject and meticulous research has resulted in a valuable historical work, rich in compassion, documenting the Irish contribution to the Great War. -- Eileen Battersby
A brilliant book -- Professor Patrick Geoghegan
Ronan McGreevy has written a vivid and endlessly informative study of Irish sites of memory of the Great War in France and Belgium, though in the case of nationalist Ireland they are really sites of non-memory. As the memory changes, so new sites are created and old ones rediscovered. The great merit of McGreevys book is to demonstrate that process for Irelands Great War over the past century. -- Professor John Horne
This is a wonderful interwoven account of the legacy and story of World War I which mixes history, personal stories and contemporary assessment. It is written with the brio and economy of a journalist and is an absorbing account, both moving and at times depressing in terms of the war's sustained and seemingly pointless loss. He has written an utterly absorbing book which brings alive the heroism, drama and struggle of the wider conflagration in Europe - and Ireland's part of it. -- Eamon Delaney
No better travelling companion is the book Wherever the Firing Line Extends - Ireland and the Western Front which takes you on a journey through the war to end all wars by visiting the places where the Irish soldiers made their mark and are commemorated in the monuments, cemeteries and landscapes of France and Flanders. -- Campbell Spray
'Wherever the Firing Line Extends' can be used as guide book on the ground, and at the same time is a fine addition to the canon of publications on the double identity of the Irish soldiers in World War I. While the book is focusing on individual stories in the face of industrial scale slaughter, it is the new approach of appreciating the memorials later generations left for these men that makes it a refreshing read. After all it is for us, the living, that these memorials exist. They remind us not to repeat the mistakes of the past. -- Marcel Krueger