
Avant-propos : Lettre à mon fils • essay by Xavier Delacroix Septembre 2014 : la victoire allemande de la Marne • short fiction by Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau Le retour • short fiction by Benoît Hopquin Les événements de Péronne • short fiction by Pierre Lemaitre Ce bon Monsieur Guillet • short fiction by Bruno Fulgini Le Royaume-Uni et les États-Unis: La dimension mondiale de la guerre de 1914-1915 • short fiction by Robert Frank (II) Notes sur le reich asiatique • short fiction by Quentin Deluermoz and Pierre Singaravélou Après la défaite d'Août 1914, la Russie vers l'Europe? • short fiction by Sophie Cœuré? Le patient aveugle, les métamorphoses du mal • short fiction by Cécile Ladjali Berlin 1921 • short fiction by Christian Ingrao Leni • short fiction by Pierre-Louis Basse La très belle époque • short fiction by Pascal Ory
Authors
Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau is a French historian. He is co-director of the Research Center of the Museum of the Great War (Historial de la Grande Guerre), based in Péronne, in the Somme. He is the son of Philippe Audoin(-Rouzeau), a surrealist writer who was close to André Breton, and the brother of the historian, archaeologist and writer Fred Vargas (alias Frédérique Audoin-Rouzeau) and the painter Jo Vargas.

Pierre Lemaitre is a French novelist and screenwriter. He is internationally renowned for the crime novels featuring the fictional character Commandant Camille Verhœven. His first novel that was translated into English, Alex, is a translation of the French book with the same title, it jointly won the CWA International Dagger for best translated crime novel of 2013. In November 2013, he was awarded the Prix Goncourt, France's top literary prize, for Au revoir là-haut (published in English as The Great Swindle), an epic about World War I. His novels Camille and The Great Swindle won the CWA International Dagger in 2015 and 2016 respectively.