Amberley Amberley i(9642870 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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1 y separately published work icon Breaker Morant : the Final Roundup Joe West , Roger Roper , Stroud : Amberley , 2016 11076162 2016 single work biography

'Workhouse-born Edwin Murrant, educated by the Freemasons, emigrated to Australia at the age of nineteen and found work on a cattle station in Queensland. Murrant spent the next sixteen years in Australia as a bushman, balladeer and all-round chancer renowned for his riding skills. Changing his name to Harry Harbord Morant, he claimed to be the son of an admiral. At the start of the Anglo-Boer war he joined the army and went to South Africa, eventually becoming a lieutenant in the Bushveldt Carbineers, an irregular unit fighting in Northern Transvaal. Enraged by the death of a friend in battle, he instigated the murder of prisoners by way of revenge. A missionary who knew too much was also killed under suspicious circumstances. Arrested and tried, he was sentenced to death and shot. Australians suggest he did not have a 'fair go' and was martyred by Lord Kitchener. Others remain fixed in their opinions: he took the law into his own hands and paid the ultimate price for his crimes. This intensively researched book, featuring a wealth of new information, reveals the truth behind the legend of Breaker Morant.' (Publication Summary)

1 y separately published work icon The Bright Squadrons : A True Story of Love and War Barbara Harper-Nelson , Genevieve Monneris (translator), Stroud : Amberley , 2014 9642877 2014 single work autobiography

'...Barbara Harper-Nelson (neé Rigby), was the one-time girlfriend, living in Liverpool, of 22 year old Francis Usai. Amazingly she still had the 350+ letters (over 2000 items of correspondence) from this witty and amusing young French airman exiled from his conquered country and based here near York, where he undertook nightly missions into the horrendous firestorm which was the Battle of Berlin.

'Along with her own diaries, these letters constituted a unique, evocative, often amusing, but highly readable two-way conversation between young people during a time unprecedented in history and with the daily threat of permanent separation, plus the very regular loss of close friends. (51% of all air crews were killed).

'With the help of Barbara herself, the letters and diaries were brought together by French filmmaker Genevieve Monneris (coincidentally, her father also a French airmen in Francis' squadron at Elvington), and translated into English by Michel Darribehaude, Senior Lecturer in British Civilisation Studies at the Université du Sud Toulon Var.

'In November 2010 the original letters were formerly placed on permanent loan from this Museum to Service Historique de la Defense at Château Vincennes in Paris (the French National Collection) and now constitutes probably the largest single social history documents of the period, in France.' (Publication summary)

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