Book description
Masterly and moving Philip Orr enhances his already high
reputation as a military historian for not only illuminating and
meticulous command of detail but for a sense of balance and a
fair-mindedness too rare in work on the long-neglected history of
Irish soldiers in the First World War. Field of Bones is an absorbing
study to be pondered by all students of the folly, the foibles, and
the fortitude of man.' - Professor Joe Lee 'In this marvellously
resonant book, Philip Orr has recovered the history of one of
Ireland's great forgotten battles ... Gallipoli was as important a
First World War battle for Ireland as the Somme was for Ulster.' -
Professor Keith Jeffery During August and September 1915 almost three
thousand young volunteer Irish soldiers died on the killing fields of
Gallipoli on the Turkish Aegean. A division of Kitchener's Army, at
Suvla Bay they fell to gunshot-wounds and shellfire, while thirst,
sunstroke and dysentery reduced their chances of survival. Hundreds
were burned alive in raging bush-fires. In post-war Ireland political
revolution led to the removal of Gallipoli from memory. One popular
ballad told the volunteers, 'you fought for the wrong country, you
died for the wrong cause, when the greatest war was at home'. Here, in
heart-breaking detail, built from letters, diaries and archival
sources, is the story of the 10th Irish Division, many of whom still
lie today in Suvla Bay's deserted field of bones.
Philip Orr, a former teacher and military historian, is author of the
best-selling The Road to the Somme: Men of the Ulster Division Tell
Their Story (Belfast 1987). He lives in Carrickfergus, County Antrim.