On a side note, i can't think of many worse places to go than the Somme?
It's a lovely part of France and they actually like Brits. I've been there many times, there and Ypres and have had some moving, spooky and funny adventures with Jerry Ward-Barber. ( Which i'll have to write up in the future )
"Now somebody explain to me why they thought it would be a good idea to form an orderly line and then walk towards a machine gun posistion"?
In the army you do as your told. That aside most the the soldiers were part of kitcheners new army. All volunteers, most uneducated ( by todays standards) and up for adventure.
They were told that after the then largest artillary bombardment in history there would be nothing left. Not even a rat. What went wrong, apart from blindingly following orders, was that the cloud cover was too low for the RFC to fly and send back their obsevations and that once the time table had been set, others had to press home the attack later in the day because some had reached the enemy's trench's and their flank's were exposed.
Good books to read.
First World war by Martin Gilbert.
A long book but easy to read. It gives you the build up to the war and then go's on with personal stories from the trench's,the home front and at sea. With the political, economic, social, royal aspects from both sides to build up a really good idea of why, and the effects that still influence our world today.
Storms of Steel by Ernst Junger
Life in the Trench's from the German point of view. He was underneath the British bombardment at the Somme.
Mud, Blood and Poppycock by Gordon Corrigan.
This book dispels lots of folklore about the WW1 without demeaning the sacrifices made on both sides.
The Unknown Soldier by Niel Hanson.
Drawn form letters and diaries he builds a picture of three combatents from Britain, Germany and the USA that have no known grave. Most intriging is the tomb of the the unknown warrior in St.Pauls. It doesn't tell you who it is, but it does tell you who it isn't.
Any of the ' Pal's' books by various people.
You local area would have raised a 'Pals' regiment for Kitcheners new army (especially up north) check them out. The one about the Birmingham Pals tells about a man from Barnet (my home town) who joined them. It even names his house, Hawthorn Cottage in Bells Hill. The house is still there, so it just go's to show that history is never that far away.
WW1 is my favourite subject but i have been to Normandy as well. How anyone got off Omaha beach is a miracle and if you do a WW1 trip around Ypres (Leper) make some time to go to the Waterloo battlefield which is not to far away near Charloi.