Peter's Wars: A Memoir
By (Author) Peter Geddes
Big Sky Publishing
Big Sky Publishing
4th September 2024
Australia
Paperback
280
Width 3886mm, Height 5842mm
This fiercely funny memoir is set in Melbourne during the 1940s. The entrenched ProtestantCatholic divide of those times informs the narrative. Juxtaposed is the gulf between Melburnians and the thousands of Yanks stationed in their city following Pearl Harbor; the dizzying effect on the women had far-reaching consequences. Growing resentment and the increasing fear of a Japanese invasion add to the tension.
Born in 1938, Peter relates that he was conceived twice. The conception resulting in his parents marriage occurs in the back of a 36 Chevy. Five months after the wedding, his mother (who wasnt above telling a little fib) experiences the first signs of pregnancy: it is then she knows that she doesnt want to be a mother.
As the war escalates Peters father joins the RAAF, leaving Peter with a mother who resents having a small child to care for. Neglected, cold and hungry, shame engulfs him when his mother entertains a stream of GIs.
Blending the matter-of-fact voice of a child with the accomplished voice of a journalist, Peters Wars captures the precise detail of the period: a kitchen without heating or running water, black market grog, rationing the combination of satire and realism highlighting human truths with stark acuity.
When Peter turns ten, his rich Catholic grandmother decides his religious education should not be neglected any longer and enrols him at Xavier College. There, Peter learns about eternal damnation and hellfire. Terrified, he responds by trying to make up for ten years of religious ignorance by attending daily mass and amassing enough good points to save his soul.
Peters Wars is a memoir that begins and ends with the defining factors of every human life: time and place.