Anzac to Amiens, 9780143571674
Paperback
Australia’s bloody coming of age on the Western Front, witnessed firsthand.

Anzac to Amiens

popular penguins

$18.53

  • Paperback

    576 pages

  • Release Date

    25 March 2014

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Summary

Anzac to Amiens: Australia’s Bloody Coming of Age

The First World War was the blooding of the young Australian nation. Five years after Australia’s overwhelming response to Britain’s declaration of war, nearly a fifth of the 330,000 Australians who served overseas lay dead. Charles Bean witnessed it all.

Appointed official war correspondent with the Australian Imperial Force in 1914, he spent the entire war in Europe at the cutting edge of the military machine. Anzac to …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780143571674
ISBN-10:0143571672
Series:War Popular Penguins
Author:C.E.W. Bean
Publisher:Penguin Books Australia
Imprint:Penguin Books Australia
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:576
Release Date:25 March 2014
Weight:360g
Dimensions:183mm x 111mm x 38mm
About The Author

C.E.W. Bean

Charles Edwin Woodrow Bean was born in Bathurst, NSW, in 1879. An Oxford graduate in law, he soon turned to writing and joined the Sydney Morning Herald as a reporter in 1908. His researches on the wool industry resulted in his classic account of outback life On the Wool Track, which was published in 1910. At the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Bean was appointed war correspondent with the Australian Imperial Force and spent the five years of the war in Europe. In addition to filling countless notebooks with descriptions, interviews and impressions of that time, Bean stayed on after the war to study the relics of battle and learnt, as historian Patsy Adam-Smith has remarked, “those things that the soldiers could not know while hostilities were taking place.” On his return to Australia in 1919 Bean commenced the enormous task of editing the Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-18, the twelfth and final volume of which was published in 1942. Bean was instrumental in establishing the Australian War Memorial, which opened in 1941, and was its guiding spirit between the wars. Much honoured in his lifetime for his contribution to Australian military history, Bean died in 1968.

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