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When the Japanese invade in 1942, the Australian men and women
stationed at the New Guinea port of Rabaul flee into the jungle.
Written off by their government as ‘hostages to fortune’, the
little-known garrison on Australia’s tropic frontier has been
left with no modern equipment, no lifeline to the outside, and no
means of escape. Most are captured and killed in the sinking of the
prison ship Montevideo Maru, which remains Australia’s worst sea
disaster. But the surviving soldiers and nurses carry on, to fight
the Japanese on other fronts, or to witness the collapse of the
Japanese Empire from the inside. Having borne the brunt of defeat,
their letters and diaries also record the turning point of the war
and the march to victory. Rich in detail drawn from first person
accounts, Should We Fall To Ruin illuminates this untold period in
military history. It is a compelling tale of bravery and resilience
in the face of a seemingly unstoppable enemy.
'What joy to be at sea again, adrift on the vast Pacific, in the
clutches of a gifted storyteller. Harrison Christian and the
mutineers of Men Without Country held me happily captive to the
very last page.' - Dava Sobel, author of Longitude 'Men Without
Country shows what a writer can produce when he has real skin in
the game... Harrison Christian sets the record straight on the
Bounty mutiny with forensic fervour, including the before, the
during - and the after.' - Adam Courtenay, author of The Ship that
Never Was Full of misadventure and mystery, Men Without Country is
a sweeping history of exploration and rebellion in the South Seas -
told by a direct descendant of Fletcher Christian, the man who led
the infamous mutiny on the Bounty A mission to collect breadfruit
from Tahiti becomes the most famous mutiny in history when the crew
rise up against Captain William Bligh, with accusations of food
restrictions and unfair punishments. Bligh's remarkable journey
back to safety is well documented, but the fates of the mutinous
men remain shrouded in mystery. Some settled in Tahiti only to face
capture and court martial, others sailed on to form a secret colony
on Pitcairn Island, the most remote inhabited island on earth,
avoiding detection for twenty years. When an American captain
stumbled across the island in 1808, only one of the Bounty
mutineers was left alive. Told by a direct descendant of Fletcher
Christian, Men Without Country details the journey of the Bounty,
and the lives of the men aboard. Lives dominated by a punishing
regime of hard work and scarce rations, and deeply divided by the
hierarchy of class. It is a tale of adventure and exploration
punctuated by moments of extreme violence - towards each other and
the people of the South Pacific. For the first time, Christian
provides a comprehensive and compelling account of the whole story
- from the history of trade and exploration in the South Seas to
Pitcairn Island, which provided the mutineers' salvation, and then
became their grave.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
This is a new release of the original 1937 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
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