Tobruk

The triumph of mateship

Tobruk
Genre: 
IN 1941 ROMMEL WAS sweeping across Libya reconquering the territory lost by Italy in the Second World War. His progress came to a serious halt in a small town with a strategically vital deep-water port—Tobruk. With few other forces available, the town was left to the Australian Imperial forces and a contingent of British artillery, the toughest most determined bunch of mates that could be assembled. The Rats of Tobruk became a legend, not just for Australians but also for everyone involved in the war in Northern Africa.

Peter FitzSimons combines remarkable research of facts with a detailed examination of the diaries and letters of the people involved in this great battle. It’s what makes Tobruk so wonderfully readable, bringing home the very human aspect of events that might otherwise simply be ‘part of history’.

For anyone interested in people and the indomitable spirit of Aussie mateship, this is compulsive reading.

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About the Author

Peter FitzSimons

Peter FitzSimons is one of the Sydney Morning Herald’s and Sun Herald’s most popular columnists, broadcasts daily on Radio 2UE and is a regular contributor to the International Herald Tribune and the London Daily Telegraph.

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