Five Months at Anzac
Joseph Lievesley Beeston
Read by Annise
A Narrative of Personal Experiences of the Officer Commanding the 4th Field Ambulance, Australian Imperial Force . From his leaving Australia December 1914 till his evacuation due to illness after 5 months at Gallipoli. Read to remember those who were there. (Introduction by Annise) (2 hr 3 min)
Chapters
1 - The Fourth Field Ambulance: The Voyage: Egypt: To Gallipoli | 25:10 | Read by Annise |
2 - The Anzac Landing; At Work on the Peninsula; Incidents and Yarns | 19:48 | Read by Annise |
3 - Air Fighting to Turkish Prisoners | 25:05 | Read by Annise |
4 - Post Office to The Attempt on Sari Bair | 28:54 | Read by Annise |
5 - Ambulance Work, Artillery Work, Turks as Fighters | 24:12 | Read by Annise |
Reviews
A very interesting, brief, work
Timothy Ferguson
This is an interesting, if somewhat short book. Like many biographies, it lacks a strong narrative line, because the author goes to Gallipoli and comes home rather at the whim of fate. The interest comes, not so much from his journey, or from his thoughts and reactions, as from the little details which he recalls. Some of the things he records are so strangely incongruous in what was, after all, a bitter struggle to the death, that unless an eyewitness had remarked on them, you'd never think them likely.
Stoic account of a terrible war
ListeninginChicago
After listening to this account, I continue to be amazed by the almost impassive narratives of a horrific war, but then I wonder if some level of detachment wasn't necessary in order to mentally handle the experience. I can't imagine how they endured the horror of being surrounded by rotting, stinking bodies (of men, mules and horses), of seeing bodies cartwheel through the air after being hit by a shell, of dealing for days at a time with the terrible injuries suffered during a "push" and for months on end with the injuries and sickness that comes with living in trenches. It is an eye opening look at the reality of The Great War. Annise turns in a solid reading (complete with authentic Australian accent) on this solo project.
Jules
it was an interesting book, but for me the narrator didn't read it with enough oomph for a war story .
Al Green - Light Through Glass
what i like is many of these ww1 memoirs are contemporary, published at the time, with a feeling of immediacy.
PDXer
A bit hard to understand. It is not a clear recording and the words ran together in places.
Paul Billingham
this story feels timeless and being read by an Aussie really helps.
Wow thanks for reading this book about anzac, interesting
A LibriVox Listener
a
A Brief but Interesting Read that'll Leave You Wanting More
F3.5.214