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F. Britten Austin (1885–1941)

Author of FORTY CENTURIES LOOK DOWN, A BIOGRAPHICAL NOVEL OF NAPOLEON.

12+ Works 23 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Works by F. Britten Austin

On the borderland (2021) 3 copies
The Fourth Degree (2004) 2 copies
An Affair of Honor (2004) 2 copies
According to orders 2 copies, 1 review
The Road To Glory (1942) 2 copies
A saga of the sword (1977) 1 copy
The Drum 1 copy
Thirteen (1925) 1 copy
The red flag (1977) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Omnibus of Crime (1929) — Contributor — 217 copies, 2 reviews
Adventure Stories from the Strand (1995) — Contributor — 120 copies
From the Depths and Other Strange Tales of the Sea (2018) — Contributor — 70 copies, 3 reviews
Glimpses of the Unknown: Lost Ghost Stories (2018) — Contributor — 62 copies, 1 review
Great Tales of Detection (1936) — Contributor — 21 copies, 1 review
Great English Short Stories (1930) — Contributor — 19 copies, 1 review
The World's Best One Hundred Detective Stories, Volume 2 (1929) — Contributor — 17 copies
Fifty Masterpieces of Mystery (1937) — Contributor — 13 copies
The Second Century of Detective Stories (1938) — Contributor — 12 copies
The Best Detective Stories of the Year: 1928 (1929) — Contributor — 8 copies
Spøgelseshistorier fra hele verden (1959) — Contributor — 6 copies, 2 reviews
My Best Thriller (1947) — Contributor — 5 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

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Reviews

Originally copyrighted in 1917, thus written while the War had another year to go. Yet when you reach the last chapter entitled "Peace", you find the Germans have lost the War and when the demustered troops arrive home, they find the citizens rioting against the government because of the lack of work and lack of food. Austin appears to have been a prophet.
Apparently, he concludes a number of his books by prophesying the future in the last chapter.
The novel is not a novel in the tradition sense. Each chapter describes how the war is impacting German soldiers. The soldiers in each chapter are different and we never meet them in a subsequent chapter. One reason for this is that many of them die. By using this method, Austin is able to illustrate the affects of different aspects of the war on the German troops. One example is the the day the Germans see their first British tank. One chapter describes conditions in a submarine. Another what it was like to be in a Zeppelin on a raid over London.
The chapter entitled "The Iron Cross" tells us of an incident on the Russian front where the German soldiers discover they are fighting Russian women. I know Russian women fought on the front lines in WW II particularly in the air force but I had not heard of this in WW I. However research has confirmed several battalions of women were formed to shame the despondent male soldiers into fighting again. The first one was called the 1st Russian Women's Battalion of Death and this Battalion is the one we meet in Austin's account.
For the most part, this is very readable if one overlooks the jingoism of a British writer writing about a war that is endangering his country as he writes.
… (more)
 
Flagged
lamour | Feb 13, 2013 |

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