âA riveting new account of the long-overlooked achievement of British-led forces who, against all odds, scored the major Allied victory of the Second World War⌠draws on an array of previously unseen documents to provide both a detailed campaign history and a fresh appreciation of the first significant Allied success of the war.ââAndrew Stewart, <i>Army Rumour Service</i><br /><br />âStewartâs engagingly written narrative goes far towards correcting the obscurity that has lingered over this important theatre of the Second World War. Communicated in lively prose and rich in anecdotes, the book will surely reach a wide audience both within the academy and beyond. . . [it] will be welcome as a comprehensive introduction to the East Africa campaign, and will certainly be useful to historians of the British, Italian, Indian and African militaries.ââDr Oliver Coates, <i>Journal of Military History</i><br />  <br /><br />'Exciting and multilayered, this is a comprehensive account of an overlooked campaign in which an outnumbered imperial army destroyed Mussoliniâs dream of a new Roman Empire. Fighting over vast distances and inhospitable terrain, forces from the Congo, Ethiopia and across the British Empire recorded the Allies' first major triumph. With its mastery of archival sources, <i>The First Victory</i> displays Andrew Stewartâs skill as an historian of Second World War campaigns and their political and strategic context. An exhilarating read.'âAshley Jackson, author of <i>Churchill</i><br /><br />âThis is a highly readable account of a little-known military campaign and an important addition to our understanding of the Second World War. The author is to be congratulated on penning an authoritative and well-written book.'âLord Ashcroft KCMG PC, author of <i>Victoria Cross Heroes</i><br /><br />