Robyn Kienzle Robyn Kienzle i(A141667 works by)
Gender: Female
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1 1 y separately published work icon The Architect of Kokoda : Bert Kienzle : The Man Who Made the Kokoda Track Robyn Kienzle , Sydney : Hachette Australia , 2011 Z1800676 2011 single work biography

'A quietly dignified and modest man, Bert Kienzle's mammoth contribution to Kokoda and Papua New Guinea, before, during and after the war, has gone largely unnoticed. While Bert was alive, several historians approached him offering to help him tell his remarkable story but he refused and after he passed away in 1988 his children rued that his remarkable story had not been written down.

Time passed with great intentions but no action until in 2006 when Robyn Kienzle's husband took their two daughters to walk the Kokoda Trail and was dismayed at the state of Bert's old home and of the Kokoda Track tourism industry. The trail being walked was not the original war Trail, places were incorrectly named and Bert was barely acknowledged at all. The time had come to set the record straight.

Robyn is not and has never claimed to be a military historian. She tells Bert Kienzle's amazing story through recollections of his family, interviews, personal papers and army archives and in The Architect of Kokoda reveals many previously unstated facts.

This is the story of a man who had an extraordinary life from start to finish. It attempts to portray who he was, how he became who he was and what he achieved during his life. During Bert's time at Kokoda it was a thriving outstation of Papua. Before the war he developed a successful goldmining industry there. After the war he provided the lifeblood for Kokoda with his rubber and cattle estates that covered 10,000 acres in the fertile Yodda Valley. During the Second World War he earned accolades like 'The Man who blazed the Kokoda Trail' and 'The King of the Angels'.

The pre WW2 chapters try to paint the picture of a man who grew up to be resilient, to be philosophical about the vagaries of life and to understand people of different cultures: the WW2 chapters try to give a detailed account of Bert's experiences and massive contribution to the success of the Kokoda Campaign: the post war chapters show that he never stopped. Despite tragedies, setbacks and seemingly unsurmountable odds, he soldiered on to be successful while still retaining the respect of all men, black or white. Source: http://kompletekokoda.com.au/ (Sighted 24/08/2011).

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