Desert Boys: Australians at war from Beersheba to Tobruk and El Alamein
By (Author) Peter Rees
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st August 2012
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
994.00
Paperback
736
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
1186g
About 1300 Australians died in the desert campaigns of World War I, while another 3500 died in North Africa and the Middle East during World War II. Thousands more carried the wounds of war for the rest of their lives. Countless families were left behind to mourn the dead and comfort the injured. A ripple effect of grief passed down the generations. This is the story of Australia's desert wars as never before told. Using letters, diaries, interviews and unpublished memoirs, Desert Boys provides an intensely personal and gripping insight into the thoughts, feelings and experiences of two generations of Australian soldiers. In many cases these were fathers and sons going to successive wars with all the tragedy, adventure and hardship that brought. Desert Boys is a powerful and absorbing story of bravery and hope, of endurance and determination, of mateship and adversity a very long way from home.
'As gritty as it is real. An amazing book about ordinary Australians made extraordinary by the times they lived through...' - Peter FitzSimons
Peter Rees is the author of The Boy from Boree Creek: The Tim Fischer Story, Tim Fischer's Outback Heroes, Killing Juanita: A True Story of Murder And Corruption, and The Other Anzacs: The Extraordinary Story of Our World War I Nurses.