Gallipoli to the Somme: Recollections of a New Zealand Infantryman
By (Author) Alexander Aitken
Edited by Alex Calder
Introduction by Alex Calder
Auckland University Press
Auckland University Press
12th April 2018
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Land forces and warfare
Australasian and Pacific history
Memoirs
940.41293092
Paperback
264
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
"Alexander Aitken was an ordinary soldier with an extraordinary mind. The student who enlisted in 1915 was a mathematical genius who could multiply nine-digit numbers in his head. He took a violin with him to Gallipoli (where field telephone wire substituted for an E-string) and practiced Bach on the Western Front. Aitken also loved poetry and knew the Aeneid and Paradise Lost by heart. His powers of memory were dazzling. When a vital roll-book was lost with the dead, he was able to dictate the full name, regimental number, next of kin and address of next of kin for every member of his former platoona total of fifty-six men. Everything he saw, he could remember. Aitken began to write about his experiences in 1917 as a wounded out-patient in Dunedin Hospital. Every few years, when the war trauma caught up with him, he revisited the manuscript, which was eventually published as Gallipoli to the Somme in 1963. Aitken writes with a unique combination of restraint, subtlety, and an almost photographic vividness. He was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Literature on the strength of this single worka book recognised by its first reviewers as a literary memoir of the Great War to put alongside those by Graves, Blunden and Sassoon. Long out of print, this is by some distance the most perceptive memoir of the First World War by a New Zealand soldier. For this edition, Alex Calder has written a new introduction, annotated the text, compiled a selection of images, and added a commemorative index identifying the soldiers with whom Aitken served"--Publisher information.
`Deeply moving . . . an epic of devotion and sacrifice.'- Sir Bernard Fergusson
Alex Calder is associate professor of English at the University of Auckland. His most recent book is The Settler's Plot: How Stories Take Place in New Zealand (Auckland University Press, 2011).