Cover Image: Fifteen Young Men

Fifteen Young Men

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Member Reviews

(I received a free copy of this book from Net Galley in exchange for an honest review.)

A cold, cruelly blustery night revealing - with agonising slowness - that fifteen young men of the Mornington Football Club would never make it home. As dawn broke and families began to mourn, a nation was to learn the full extent of one of the world's worst sporting disasters. The sinking of the Process in catastrophically rough seas off Victoria's Mornington Peninsula in 1892, with the loss of all on board, horrified Australia. 'Such an accident has no parallel in our land's history,' reported The Argus. Yet somehow, for more than a century, this calamitous event slipped from Australia's consciousness. In Fifteen Young Men, journalist Paul Kennedy reveals the stories behind the tragedy. In his compelling evocation of a spirited Australian town on the cusp of a new century, he captures the trauma of families and friends suffering almost unbearable loss, but also the irrepressible optimism of the times, and the mateship, love and resilience that would come to define a budding nation.

I am so sorry. I really wanted to enjoy this.

I got to 20% of the book and stopped. It was all about the people of the area. Hardly a mention of the titular young men.
I got to 50% and was bored.
I finished it, but not really willingly.
The book was only 320 pages long and wasted about 75 pages telling me the history of Mornington and the people who started it. Sure, eventually that came into play but I think this could have been told in a different way to keep the interest level.


Paul
ARH

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