<p>The First World War Diaries of Manchester Pals Captain Charlie May &#8211; written and kept in secret and published now for the first time. A born storyteller Charlie May&#8217;s vivid eye for detail and warm good humour brings his experience in the trenches (and the experience of millions of ordinary men like him) to life for a 21st-century readership.</p> <p>Captain Charlie May was killed aged 27 in the early morning of 1st July 1916 leading the men of &#8216;B Company&#8217; 22nd Manchester Service Battalion (the Manchester Pals) into action on the first day of the Somme.</p> <p>This tolerant and immensely likeable man had been born in New Zealand and &#8211; against King&#8217;s regulations &#8211; he kept a diary in seven small wallet-sized pocket books. A journalist before the war and a born storyteller May&#8217;s diaries give a vivid picture of battalion life in and behind the trenches during the build-up to the greatest battle fought by a British army and are filled with the friendships and tensions the home-sickness frustrations delays and endless postponements the fog of ignorance the combination of boredom and terror to which every man that has ever fought could testify.</p> <p>His diaries reflect on the progress of the war tell jokes &#8211; good and bad give details of horse-rides along the Somme valley afternoons with a fishing rod lunch in Amiens a gastronomic celebration of Christmas 1915 and concerts in &#8216;Whiz Bang Hall&#8217;. He describes battles not just with the enemy but with rats crows and on the makeshift football pitch &#8211; all recorded with a freshness that brings these stories home as if for the first time.</p> <p>The diaries are also written as an extended and deeply-moving love letter to his wife Maude and baby daughter Pauline. &#8216;I do not want to die&#8217; he wrote &#8211; &#8216;Not that I mind for myself. If it be that I am to go I am ready. But the thought that I may never see you or our darling baby again turns my bowels to water.&#8217;</p> <p>Fresh eloquent and warm these diaries were kept secret from the censor and were delivered to his wife after his death by a fellow soldier in Charlie&#8217;s company. Edited by his great-nephew and published for the first time these diaries give an unforgettable account of the war that took Charlie May&#8217;s life and millions of others like him.</p>