Tobruk 1941 Tobruk 1941

Tobruk 1941

Text Classics

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Publisher Description

In early 1941 Australian soldiers stormed Italy’s stronghold on the Libyan coast and took control of the port city of Tobruk. Heavily outnumbered, yet resourceful and defiant, the Australians then defended the garrison against sustained attack by German forces. For five months the ‘Rats of Tobruk’ held on, dealing a major blow to the Axis powers’ North African campaign. Tobruk 1941 is the pioneering ABC reporter Chester Wilmot’s on-the-ground account of the siege, a landmark work of war writing.

This edition comes with a new introduction by the historian Peter Cochrane.  

Chester Wilmot was born in 1911, and studied history and law at the University of Melbourne. After working briefly as a legal clerk, he became a war correspondent for the ABC and later the BBC, working in the Middle East, North Africa, Europe and New Guinea. A dynamic, innovative and sometimes controversial journalist, Wilmot reported from the frontlines of many key battles. He later settled in England, where he became a broadcaster and military historian. His second book, The Struggle for Europe (1952), was a bestseller and is still considered one of the finest books about World War II. Wilmot died in a plane crash in 1954.


‘Riveting…[Tobruk 1941] brings to vivid life the battle.’ Age

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2017
3 April
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
464
Pages
PUBLISHER
The Text Publishing Company
SELLER
Text Publishing
SIZE
5.5
MB

More Books by Chester Wilmot

The Struggle for Europe The Struggle for Europe
2015
Tobruk 1941 Tobruk 1941
2017