This is a bound volume of 12 issues of "THE SATURDAY EVENING POST" from April 6, 1918 to June 29, 1918. All issues come with their original front and back covers. Some of the front covers depict World War I related scenes; the May 18 front cover is illustrated by Norman Rockwell ("Clown and Boy"). The issues are loaded with advertisements and articles of both fiction (including P.G. Wodehouse and Sinclair Lewis) and non-fiction (including many articles related to World War I). Many of the advertisements have a war theme. The volume measures 14" tall x 11 1/2" wide x 2 1/2" thick.

The following 12 issues are included:  APRIL: 6, 13, 20, 27; MAY: 4, 11, 18, 25; JUNE: 1, 8, 22, 29.

Here are a few examples of the World War I articles:  "Being Bombed and Seeing it Done," "Gassed," "Private McCorkle, Prisoner of War," "At the Front of the Front," "A Canteener in France," "The Motor Truck Enlisted," "Our Navy and the French Coast," "Humane Treatment - German Style," "Reform or Revolution," "Despotism by the Dregs," "The Three Zones of Warfare," "Treasure Houses of Mercy - The Red Cross as a Great Merchant Firm," "The Iron Cross," "The Guns that Count," "A Great War Base East of Suez," "On Night Patrol," "On the Threshold of the Battle of Battles," "The Navy Takes Charge," "Aces High," "Germany's Three-Thousand-Mile," "The Horrors of Moonlight," "Labor and the War."