EUR 13,77
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. In.
EUR 17,19
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbPaperback. Zustand: Brand New. 94 pages. 8.19x5.83x0.28 inches. In Stock.
Zustand: New.
Verlag: Thomas Nelson and & Sons, London, 1920
Anbieter: Rooke Books PBFA, Bath, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verbandsmitglied: PBFA
Erstausgabe
EUR 58,92
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbCloth. Zustand: Very Good Indeed. Steven Spurrier (illustrator). First edition. The first edition of this scarce collection of wartime tales, contributed to and edited by John Buchan, with illustrations by Steven Spurrier. The first edition of this very scarce work.Illustrated with a monochrome frontispiece, and eleven monochrome plates. Collated, complete.A collection of short stories on the First World War from soldiers, edited and contributed to by John Buchan, the popular Scottish author. The stories cover subjects such as the battle of Ypres in 1914, the Battle of Loos, and other notable wartime events.In the publisher's original binding. In the publisher's original cloth. Externally excellent with slight fading to the spine and minimal edge wear. Bookplate of J. L. Weir to the front pastedown, with light offsetting to the endpapers. Internally firmly bound with bright and generally clean pages. Light tidemarks to the extremities of several plates. Very Good Indeed. book.
Verlag: Venables Print (for Napier Borough Council), Napier, 1919
Anbieter: Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB, Adelaide, SA, Australien
Zustand: Very Good. Napier, Venables Print (for Napier Borough Council), 1919. A card bifolium (167 × 106 mm), comprising the list of invited guests on the front cover, the Toast List, a small mounted gelatin silver portrait photograph of Storkey (by 'Iliad' of Napier), and the colour-pictorial title at the rear (surely a printer's error of some magnitude, but discovered too late to do anything about it!). Trifling signs of age and use; in excellent condition. Napier-born Percy Valentine Storkey (1893-1969) has signed the card above his portrait: 'P.V. Storkey Capt. 19th Bn. AIF'. Signatures of the mayor, H. Hill, and two others are also present. 'On 7 April 1918 the 5th Brigade, of which the 19th Battalion formed part, was assigned to clear the area north of Hangard Wood, near Villers-Bretonneux. Intelligence had inaccurately reported that the wood was "lightly held". The attacking company of the 19th, whose men were tired, lay down at the starting line at dawn. Storkey, who was second-in-command, fell asleep and his company left without him; it had advanced about eighty yards (73 m) when he woke. He caught up with his men only to go through heavy machine-gun fire which had hit 25 per cent of them even before the company's leading groups reached the edge of the wood. Captain Wallach, the company commander, was shot in both knees and Storkey took over, leading six men through head-high saplings to get behind the German machine-gun force. Together with another officer and four men, they broke into a clearing behind several trenches from where the Germans were firing at the rest of Storkey's company. One of the Australians yelled when he saw the enemy, some of whom looked around. For both sides it was attack or perish. Storkey instantly headed the charge, engaging the nearest Germans before they had fully reacted. His party killed or wounded thirty of them and the survivors - comprising over fifty men - surrendered. Storkey's confident and determined leadership had given the impression that he led a larger force than the handful visible to the Germans. He was awarded the Victoria Cross. He was later again wounded in action and in May promoted captain; he returned to Australia in November and his AIF appointment ended in January 1919' ('Australian Dictionary of Biography'). He had arrived in NSW in 1911; he returned there after the war, studied law, and eventually became a district court judge. He bequeathed his Victoria Cross to his old school at Napier.