The best personal account of tank warfare in the Western Desert is generally reckoned to be Alamein to Zem Zem by Keith Douglas. It is indeed a great book, telling in spare, sensitive, limpid prose how it feels to turn from being a young man with romantic illusions about the nobility of war into a batttle-hardened tank veteran. But because it was written by an upper-class poet there are some elements that are missing.

For example, Douglas never mentions how you can tell if a soldier on leave has been involved in a tank battle: for days afterwards, thanks to the constant inhalation of shell fumes in a confined space, he will fart the smell of cordite. Nor does he dwell overmuch on the foulness of your shirt and socks after weeks in the 100- degree heat without washing or how to cope with dysentery in the midst of an action. Nor, being a cavalry officer from a smart county yeomanry regiment rather than a grimy tankie from the Royal Tank Corps, would he ever write a sentence like, ‘There is something about a tank that becomes part of you … almost as if the engine pumped the blood through your veins.’

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