|
If
you have not read The Anzacs there will always
be a part of Australia you will never understand.
Les Carlyon, The Australian.
Gallipoli
was the final resting place for thousands of young Australians.
Death struck so fast there was not time for escape or
burial. And when Gallipoli was over there was the misery
of the European Campaign.
Patsy
Adam-Smith read over 8000 diaries and letters to write
her acclaimed best-seller about the First World War.
Soldiers sought her out to tell her why they went, what
they saw, and how they felt about that great holocaust.
Their simple accounts are more vivid than any novel;
the years have not dimmed their memories of lost comrades
and the horrors of war. These are the extraordinary
experiences of ordinary men - and they strike to the
heart.
Winner
of the Age Book of the Year award when first published
in 1978, The Anzacs remains unrivalled as the
classic account of Australia's involvement in the First
World War.
|