Showing posts with label ANZAC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ANZAC. Show all posts

Monday, June 28, 2021

Roy Kyle's ANZAC story

 




Good condition apart from a slight tear on the side cover.
PB. 308pp. $15 including postage anywhere in Australia.
Many books have been written by officers, historians and military experts on the part the Anzacs played in the Dardanelles campaign during the First World War.
There are very few by the ordinary soldier.
Roy Kyle started writing this memoir at the age of 89 and almost completed it before he died.
A typical Anzac, fiercely patriotic, he enlisted in the A.I.F. in 1915, several months under-age.
He spent his eighteenth birthday in the terrible trenches of Gallipoli and then went on to serve on the Western Front.
An Anzac's Story is an honest, poignant account of a young man's experience of war.
It is much more than this, though, for Roy Kyle's story begins with his colourful, classic Australian childhood in country New South Wales and Victoria in the early years of last century.
Bryce Courtenay, who helped get Roy Kyle's memoirs published, has provided a moving introduction to his life and times.

About the author

Albert Roy Kyle (or Roy, as most people knew him) was born at Corowa, NSW in 1897, the third of four children.
He was working as a bank clerk in Terang when, at the age of 17 and with his parents' reluctant approval, he enlisted in the A.I.F.
He served first at Gallipoli and later in France and Belgium.
After the war he rejoined the bank and in 1920 he married Jessie Johanssen, with whom he had two children.
After Roy retired in 1960, he and Jessie moved to Geelong in Victoria, where they remained for the rest of their lives.

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Biography of a Gallipoli hero

 



Incredible read. Excellent condition. PB. 393pp. $15 including postage anywhere in Australia.
From the bestselling author of Goodbye Cobber, God Bless You and Gallipoli Sniper.
In The Price of Valour award-winning journalist John Hamilton gives us an extraordinary insight into the life of a real Australian hero, Hugo Throssell.
From the bloody battles of The Nek and Hill 60 during the Gallipoli campaign, where Throssell won a Victoria Cross, to the Great Depression of the 1930s, where his life came to its tragic end, Hamilton has written a rich and vivid portrait of a fearless soldier, a national hero, a born-again socialist, a loving husband and father, and finally a victim of the war's long and destructive aftermath.
Winner of the Nib Waverley Library Award for Literature People's Choice Award 2013