On Gallant Wings
By (Author) Helen Edwards
Yellow Brick Books
Riveted Press
2nd April 2025
Australia
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Warfare, battles, armed forces
Paperback
288
Width 135mm, Height 210mm
Thirteen-year-old Ava lives in Darwin with her family and their homing pigeons, of which Essie is Avas favourite. A Japanese family live next door and their son, Kazuo, is Avas best and only real friend. Her father is serving overseas. As Essie is taking her first flight, Ava overhears an argument about her brother Fred, who has lied about his age to join the militia. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, he trains in Darwin and later helps set up a pigeon service in Townsville. While most residents evacuate, Ava remains because her mother (who works in the post office) is essential to the war effort. Later that day, military police take Kazuo and his family away in a truck to a holding campmuch to Avas distressalong with more than 1100 others of Japanese heritage who considered Darwin their home. On February 19, 1942, Darwin is bombed, and Ava and her mother are evacuated in a cattle train with the remaining women and children. After a very difficult journey, they arrive, exhausted, at her grandparents home in Lake Boga, where they discover the extent of the damage to Darwin is being concealed from the population. Even those who were actually there know only part of the truth. Desperate to do something to contribute to the war effort, Avas mother joins the WAAAF and begins work at the secret Catalina Flying Boat Base. When the authorities decide to remove Kazuo from the family camp and sent him to the mens camp on his own, he escapes and makes his way to Lake Boga to find Ava. Living by rules and rituals has always been how Ava has felt safe, but now she must decide what is rightto report a potentially dangerous escapee to the authorities, or to protect a beloved friend
Helen founded an award-winning charity and online counselling service, supporting thousands of people with diabetes across the world (for which she was a state finalist in the Australian of the Year Awards). She is an engaging speaker, has been featured on television, radio and in newspapers, and has close to 100,000 followers on social media.