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Donat Gallagher

Donat Gallagher

The Latest From Donat Gallagher

  • The Edmund Campion You Didn’t Know

    Edmund Campion: A Scholarly Life by Gerard Kilroy Ashgate, 2015, […]

    Jul 01 2016

    21 mins

  • Two books on Evelyn Waugh

    Evelyn Waugh by Michael Barber Hesperus Press, 2013, 135 pages, […]

    Oct 01 2014

    9 mins

  • Brisbane Life and Tokyo Justice

    Ian Callinan’s book appears alongside several others graphically describing the experience of Australian prisoners of war on the Burma railway. It is one of the best

    Nov 19 2013

    9 mins

  • England’s Merry Martyr

    Richard Simpson, revised, edited and enlarged by Peter Joseph, Edmund […]

    Apr 30 2011

    12 mins

  • ‘Muddle Tall as Treachery’

    Diggers and Greeks: The Australian Campaigns in Greece and Crete, by Maria Hill;  UNSW Press, 2010, 496 pages, $59.95.

    Anzac Fury: The Bloody Battle of Crete 1941,  by Peter Thompson; William Heinemann, 2010, 506 pages, $49.95.

    It is always a pleasure to read a well informed, passionately argued case for righting a wrong, such as Maria Hill’s Diggers and Greeks: The Australian Campaigns in Greece and Crete. Dr Hill seeks to show that British, Australian and New Zealand historians have (with some exceptions) denigrated, minimised or simply blotted out the part played by the Greeks and Cretans in the campaigns of 1941. Having explored Greek as well as British and Commonwealth records, she demonstrates the value of the Greek and Cretan contribution to important battles (never shirking negative assessments when called for). The formidable fighting spirit of the people, and of the militia groups and gendarmerie, fills in the picture. Varying from place to place and between senior officers and lower ranks, everywhere dogged by unresponsive allies and by lack of arms, ammunition, food and information, Greek and Cretan troops and civilians filled far more significant roles than emerge from most campaign histories in English. It is fascinating to read Greek and Cretan rebuttals of accusations made by British and Commonwealth critics, and of their disappointment with (what seemed to them) less than wholehearted allies. I would have welcomed more of the Greek perspective.  

    Jul 01 2010

    13 mins

  • The Lygons, the Flytes and Evelyn Waugh

    Paula Byrne’s Mad World: Evelyn Waugh and the Secrets of […]

    Mar 01 2010

    15 mins

  • Spying on Friends

    Some books mean more when read together with others. Jennet […]

    Jun 01 2009

    16 mins

  • Telling It Like It Wasn’t

    A normally businesslike acquaintance asked about my topic [Brideshead Revisited]; in return I asked whether she had read the novel. Uneasy silence followed. Then, with unbusinesslike shyness she replied: “Thirty-seven times. I was an alcoholic, and I feel so close to Sebastian that I can’t stop reading the book.”

    Dec 01 2008

    18 mins