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NOTES (34 pages)
PHOTOGRAPHS
MAPS
ISBN 0 646 35289 X
How to purchase Masked Eden
In the UK
Price £28 from all
good bookshops
By post
Matala Press
PO Box 829
Maleny
Queensland 4552
Australia.
UNSIGNED COPIES
$(Aust)65
plus $5 P&P & GST
Queries from any country please
e-mail Anne McCosker
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Masked Eden is a story of love and beauty,
gallantry, courage and betrayal.
The wonderful pioneering spirit of Australians is seen - often in
co-operation with the New Guineans - struggling with the incompetence and
ignorance of a small elite in Canberra and Rabaul.
The Fall of Rabaul to the
Japanese in 1942 - when over 1000 Australian civilians and soldiers were
lost; the greatest purely Australian tragedy in her history - is, for the
first time, fully examined using original material gathered from the
nation's archives and the author's personal collection.
Rabaul fell before Singapore, the significance of which is still not
widely appreciated, particularly by Australians. Rabaul was the sole
responsibility of Australia. It was therefore unlike all other Australian
war losses. Responsibility in these other losses was dispersed among
several nations.
Many letters and articles are published in Masked Eden. Perhaps
the most important of these is Stan McCosker's six page report regarding
events in Rabaul leading up to the fall of the town to the Japanese in
January 1942. (McCosker was there until hours before this event). His
subsequent treatment by the Australian establishment has probably much
connection with this report.
Rombin (see photographs) was the McCosker's overseer and friend. The book
'Seventy Thousand to One' by Quentin Reynolds - well known American
war correspondent - is based on Rombin's rescue of the American airman
Gordon Manuel. One of the greatest personal achievements of friendship by
a New Guinean to a European during WWII.
An important chapter deals with the 'Montevideo Maru', the
Japanese ship on which so many Europeans (civilian and military) from the
Rabaul area are alleged to have perished when it was sunk by an allied
submarine in early 1942. The author holds - perhaps more than any other
scholar - material available from pre WWII European residents of New
Guinea, concerning this mystery. Critical evidence from the National
Archives is also included.
Anne McCosker is well suited to write Masked Eden. A B.A.
History Honours degree from the University of London gave her the
discipline and discernment needed to collect and correlate the large
amount of available material. This was added to her personal knowledge.
Her father first went to New Guinea in 1924. He married Marjorie Martin
in Rabaul in 1929 - then the capital of the Mandated Territory of New
Guinea. Later the partnership of 'McCosker and King' bought Matala
Plantation. New Guinea would dominate her childhood even whilst being
educated in Queensland, Australia.
Masked Eden is an important contribution to WWII studies, and will
be enjoyed by all those interested in the facts of history.
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