In the Flash Ranging Service by Edward Alva Trueblood

(7 User reviews)   1516
By Emma Reed Posted on Mar 18, 2026
In Category - Pet Stories
Trueblood, Edward Alva Trueblood, Edward Alva
English
Hey, have you ever wondered how soldiers figured out where enemy artillery was hiding before radar? I just finished a book that answers exactly that. 'In the Flash Ranging Service' isn't your typical war story. It follows a young man named Edward Trueblood (the author himself!) who gets thrown into this bizarre, high-stakes world during WWI. His job? To stand in the open, watch for the flash of enemy guns, and use math and a telegraph to pinpoint their location—all while they're trying to blow him to pieces. It's a true story about a job I'd never even heard of, and it's way more nerve-wracking than any fictional thriller. If you like hidden histories and real-life tension, you need to check this out.
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This is the kind of book that makes you realize how much history we've forgotten. Edward Alva Trueblood tells his own story of serving in the American Expeditionary Forces during World War I, but he wasn't a front-line soldier in the trenches. He was part of a small, specialized team doing a job that sounds almost impossible.

The Story

The book follows Trueblood from his enlistment to his assignment with the Flash Ranging Service. The concept is simple but terrifying. Men were posted at observation points along the front. When they saw the flash of an enemy cannon firing, they'd immediately telegraph a central plotting room. By triangulating the reports from several observers, the army could calculate the gun's exact position and fire back. Trueblood details the long hours of boredom, the sudden bursts of sheer terror when shells started falling, and the intense camaraderie with the men sharing this peculiar duty. It's less about grand battles and more about the precise, dangerous science of survival.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was the everyday reality of it. Trueblood writes with a clear, matter-of-fact voice. He doesn't overdramatize; the danger and the absurdity speak for themselves. You feel the chill of the French winter in an exposed post, the strain of staring at the horizon for hours, and the weird disconnect of using slide rules and geometry in the middle of a war. It turns the anonymous 'war effort' into something personal and tangible. These were smart kids applying brand-new technology in a very old-fashioned kind of hell.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for history buffs who are tired of the same old general narratives, and for anyone who loves a good, true-life adventure story. It's not a long or difficult read, but it's packed with details that stick with you. You'll come away with a new understanding of a tiny, crucial cog in the war machine and a lot of respect for the quiet specialists whose stories often get lost. If you enjoyed books like 'The Guns of August' but want a ground-level view, give this memoir a try.

Susan Anderson
3 months ago

From the very first page, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. One of the best books I've read this year.

Jessica Gonzalez
1 year ago

Very interesting perspective.

5
5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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