Personal accounts, biographies, histories and even guide books—Australia’s military history is the subject of a whole army of books hitting the shelves this month.
Is it something in the air? There can be no arguing the fact that military history is the nonfiction flavour of the month at present. First, from HarperCollins in July came Tobruk, a history of the World War Two siege of Tobruk that tells the personal histories of the Australian soldiers who defended the fort for eight months. Written by journalist Peter Fitzsimons, the book also gives an overview of the action in Germany and Britain. Coming in August is the far more personal Somme Mud (Random House) an account by Edward Lynch of his experiences in the Somme at the end of the First World War. Written in the decade following that war, Somme Mud relates the day-to-day war experiences of Lynch, an infantryman who was only 18 when he enlisted. Excepts of the book have appeared in the RSL magazine Reveille, but August marks the first publication of the work in its entirety.
The Guns of Maschu (Don Dennis, Allen & Unwin) and The Last Man Standing (Peter Dornan, Allen & Unwin) are biographies of men who survived devastating battles in the Second World War; the first tells the story of the author’s uncle Mick Dennis and his role in a disastrous secret mission on the Japanese-held Muschu Island off the coast of New Guinea; the latter is the story of Herb Ashby, a survivor of the all-important Battle of El Alamein.
Vietnam: Australia’s Ten Year War 1962—1972 (Richard Pelvin, Hardie Grant) is a history of this more recent conflict, including a section on the protest movement and many photographs and other archive material; and, while it’s not entirely historical Modern Military Heroes (Narelle Biedermann, Random House) draws on Australia’s military past as well as featuring personal tales from military personnel involved in actions in Rwanda, East Timor and Afganistan.
Finally, in a different take on military history, Garrie Hutchinson has written Pilgrimage: A Traveller’s Guide to Australian Battlefields (Black Inc.). The record crowds that have flocked to Gallipoli for the Anzac Day dawn service in recent years suggest such a book might have a growing audience; if so, these readers will certainly appreciate Hatchinson’s comprehensive notes on Australian war sites from Anzac Cove to the Thai–Burma Railway. Part history, part travel guide, the guide includes maps, photographs and ‘Travel Tool Kit’ sections.
This article from Thorpe Bowker's Weekly Book Newsletter and Media Extra is reproduced by kind permission of Thorpe-Bowker, a division of R R Bowker LLC. © Copyright 2006, Thorpe-Bowker
A Rose for the Anzac Boys by Jackie FrenchJackie French believes that good, historical writing really needs to come from source documents: things written at the time that give the feeling of the world as it was then, not just the facts.
16 March, 2008
ANZAC Day reads for 2008Anzac Day is fast approaching.
Anzac: An Illustrated History 1914-1918 by Richard Pelvin will be released in paperback this year to coincide with the day (Hardie Grant).
13 March, 2008
Tales from the frontPersonal accounts, biographies, histories and even guide books—Australia’s military history is the subject of a whole army of books hitting the shelves this month.
5 October, 2006
The Wreck of the Batavia and Prosper by Simon LeysThe story of the wreck of the
Batavia has been the inspiration for many works of fiction, nonfiction and film. Leys’ essay on the wreck begins with a curious introduction. He explains a long-held desire to write the tale of the
Batavia; nervously reading all the other publications on the topic; and concluding none of them hit the mark.
11 December, 2005
Beyond Belief by Roger CrossThe authors of this book, Roger Cross, a senior fellow at Melbourne University, and Avon Hudson, a campaigner for victims of British atomic tests in Australia, argue that because Australia was such an eagerly subservient ally, it was kept in the dark about the real extent of the 12 atomic tests carried out at Maralinga in the years 1952–1957, and the minor trials that continued until 1962.
20 June, 2005
An Australian connection: Robert Ryan's new book, After MidnightRobert Ryan is a pretty big deal sales-wise in the UK, where his books are regular features of the Top 10 lists. Here in Australia, his fans are not quite so legion, but that may all be set to change with the Australian connection in his latest novel,
After Midnight, he told
Eliza Metcalfe.
13 May, 2005
Darkness in Paris by Peter FergusonIn May 1940 Germany invaded France and within six weeks had triumphantly seized control of Paris. The Allies' complacency was replaced with a sense of helplessness as they were defeated by a new kind of dynamic warfare.
11 May, 2005
Hellfire: Australia, Japan and the Prisoners of War by Cameron ForbesHellfire traces the experiences of the Australian, British and Allied prisoners of war under Japanese occupation during World War II. The book analyses the cultural differences, dating from the 19th century, which underpinned the attitudes of the politicians and the military on both sides of the conflict.
11 April, 2005
Animal Heroes by Anthony HillFollowing on from the success of historical narratives like
Soldier Boy and
Young Digger that explore untold stories from Australia’s fighting past, Anthony Hill’s
Animal Heroes collates and presents the important role animals have played in conflicts from the World War I to the present day. Hill’s text clearly conveys the love and admiration these animals were afforded by their handlers, comrades or adopted owners. Whether they were an intuitive kitten smuggled aboard HMAS
Perth, a Doberman who defected for a tin of bully beef, or one of the 11 tracking dogs who served so valiantly in Vietnam, each animal’s story is lovingly retold through surviving memory of family members, or official documents.
20 March, 2005
Well Done, Those Men by Barry HeardBarry Heard’s quiet life on a remote Victorian farm was interrupted by ‘a very official letter in a brown envelope’ that turned up one day in 1964. He had been called up for National Service, or ‘Nasho’. A lucky brush with German measles kept him out of the army the first time around, but by February 1966 21-year-old Heard was off to the Puckapunyal army base. For a naïve country boy the army training was an adventure full of blokey bonhomie, but one that suddenly became very serious once he was stationed with a regular regiment, the 7RAR, that was about to be deployed in Vietnam.
20 March, 2005
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