Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

Rod Beecham

Rod Beecham is a Melbourne-based freelance reviewer.

Rod Beecham reviews ‘Don’t Worry About Me: Wartime letters of the 8th division AIF’ edited by Robyn Arvier and ‘Hellfire: Australia, Japan and the prisoners of war’ by Cameron Forbes

April 2005, no. 270 01 April 2005
Australian folk memory of the Pacific War centres on specific events – the sinking of the Repulse and the Prince of Wales, the fall of Singapore, the bombing of Darwin – events overlaid by semi-mythical visions of an insomniac prime minister and his cable wars with Winston Churchill, and of epics of soldierly endurance on the Kokoda Trail. The horrors of the Thailand–Burma railway belong, in ... (read more)

Rod Beecham reviews ‘Game For Anything: Writings on cricket’ by Gideon Haigh and ‘The Best Australian Sports Writing 2004’ edited by Garrie Hutchinson

March 2005, no. 269 01 March 2005
Gideon Haigh likes cricket, literature and history, and his writings on cricket are accordingly shrewd, learned and illuminating. He writes particularly well of Jack Gregory and of George Headley. Gregory was the embodiment of the Anzac legend: tall, bronzed, blue-eyed, an artilleryman in the Great War. He played for an AIF eleven in England after the war, took dazzling close catches, demolished C ... (read more)

Rod Beecham reviews 'Back on the Wool Track' by Michelle Grattan

August 2004, no. 263 01 August 2004
Charles Edwin Woodrow Bean was born in Bathurst, New South Wales, in 1879, but his family moved to England ten years later. Bean returned to Australia in 1904 and became a junior reporter on the Sydney Morning Herald. On assignment in western New South Wales to produce a series of articles on the wool industry, Bean decided that the most important part of the industry was the men on whose labour i ... (read more)