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This is the story of Arthur Watkins, blacksmith, who leaves his beloved young wife Helen to serve with the 10th Light Horse Battalion in the Middle East in World War I. He returns without his horse, a man forever changed by what he has seen and suffered. Years later, Arthur's children Ruth and Tom are still feeling the effects of the first war when Tom is sent by his father to work in Sumatra. Tom Watkins is there in 1942 when the Japanese invade and is taken prisoner. This is the story of two wars that divide and unite a father and son, and all the years that lie in between. No library descriptions found. |
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The novel begins on 15th August 1945, in Millendon, WA, when neighbour Mrs Prichard bursts in to pass on the news that the war is over. These days Millendon is a suburb of Perth, but in 1945 it was a country town, small enough for Ruth, after Pearl Harbour, to be asked about her brother Tom in Sumatra whenever she went to the general store or the post office. After the fall of Singapore and the Dutch East Indies, they stopped asking.
Arthur is 'like he is' because he's a veteran of the Great War. He was with the 10th Light Horse, an infantry regiment which rode horses into battle. He was a blacksmith, enlisted to look after the thousands of horses shipped over to the Middle East where they were trained to tolerate battle conditions and the hostile desert environment. Arthur survives, but he comes home as a man damaged not only by the slaughter but by his ambivalent feelings about the courage of the Australian troops who also engaged in shameful behaviour. An introspective man who knows the value of scarce water supplies, he is troubled by the way the troops help themselves to the locals' water wells; he is uneasy about looting, including the theft of an ancient Roman mosaic; and although he doesn't participate in the Surafend Massacre it haunts him ever thereafter. He is also haunted by the horses, loyal, faithful and brave companions through thick and thin, that were not repatriated to Australia afterwards. (It is widely believed that they were all shot, but that, according to this article at the State Library of Queensland, is a myth. What is beyond dispute is that only one was ever returned to Australia.)
Bitter and haunted by these memories, Arthur can't restore his relationship with his wife Helen. His daughter Ruth, born while he was on active service, ends up caring for Tom, the boy born into this dysfunctional family after Arthur's return. It's a sad household, one surrounded by other families in the district where damaged men struggle on, side by side with families in mourning for the loss of their men. They are poor and shabby, and Arthur — taciturn and moody and bereft of hope — is not much of a farmer.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2022/04/07/only-birds-above-by-portland-jones/ ( )