Guerilla Surgeon: A New Zealand Surgeon's wartime experiences with Yugoslav Partisans: 1

Author:

Major Lindsay Rogers

Publisher:
John Douglas Publishing

ISBN:
9780995121942 

Date published:
25 March

Pages:
302

Format:
Hardback

RRP:
$65

 

WAR BRINGS strange fates to many men but to none more than Lindsay Rogers, a New Zealand surgeon who had been serving with the Eighth Army in the desert. He volunteered for special service in S.O.E. and then found himself set down on one dark night on the Isle of Vis, off the Dalmation coast.
His job was to work as a surgeon among Yugoslav partisans; to fight with them, to tend the wounded and to act as an unofficial liaison officer between them and the Allied troops. For many months to come, in caves and deep in forests, up mountains, he brought all his skill as a surgeon, his staunch- ness and bravery as a serving soldier to his strange job.
He was soon attached to the British Mission under Fitzroy Maclean, and was interviewed by Tito, who held him in the highest regard. In Guerilla Surgeon he tells his story−it is an inspiring and intensely exciting one -a story of sudden flights, of attacks by night, a story of incredibly brave men and, perhaps particularly, women. Above all it is the story of a man whose job it was to save life, not destroy it. And this job Lindsay Rogers performed under the most fantastic conditions, in makeshift shelters, with little or no equipment, sometimes with untrained assistants, and with the barriers of a different language and a different ideology between him and those amongst whom he work.
Among many first hand stories of the war Guerilla Surgeon will stand out for its compassion and understanding of an alien people fighting for their freedom; for the integrity of a man who refused to compromise and whose name became a legend among those whom he served; and for the quiet modesty with which his story is told.

About the author:

Matiu Baker is Curator Historic Maori Visual Materials at Te Papa. Rebecca Rice is the Curator of New Zealand Historical Art at Te Papa. Her research includes New Zealand's representation at international exhibitions, particularly through the displays of fine art, photography and ethnographic artefacts, as well as how artists used these exhibitions to promote their own practice. Katie Cooper is Curator New Zealand Histories and Culture at Te Papa. Her research interest is the material culture of domestic life, focusing in particular on nineteenth-century New Zealand. She is also engaged in ongoing research into the social and cultural history of rural New Zealand. Michael Fitzgerald is a former History Curator at Te Papa who is now a Research Fellow at the Museum.


Author

Bio to go here lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum lorem ipsum

http://www.website.co.nz
Previous
Previous

Dark Sky: A Nellie Prayle Mystery

Next
Next

Poetry Aotearoa Yearbook 2024: Revelations