A Cellist Soldier by Robert J. Fanshawe - Book Tour
A Cellist Soldier
by Robert J Fanshawe
Summary:
A British Battalion moves up ready for the World War One 1917 battle of Arras.
A much loved Regimental Sergeant Major is blown up, the man taking his place intensely disliked.
A patrol is sent into No Man’s Land to rescue a casualty crying for help.
One soldier, a cello player, throws his rifle away when the wrong casualty is shot in frustration.
Threatened with Court Martial, he walks alone to find the real one, imagining playing his cello.
He finds him, legs impossibly injured, pulls him from the mud and carries him towards a German medical station.
The casualty, Sergeant John Wall, a real soldier shot for desertion in 1917,
dies and the cello player is taken prisoner. He runs from the medical station wearing a red cross apron.
On returning to his own line he is arrested.
Witness a flawed Court Martial and a bizarre final ‘victory’ which is to have a profound effect
on Ben the cellist’s friend and the fundamental question of justice in war.
Information about the Book
Title: A Cellist Soldier
Author: Robert J Fanshawe
Genre: Historical Fiction
Publication Date: 9th June 2020
Page Count: 276
Publisher: Clink Street Publishing
Excerpt
A cancer of
bitterness spread through the Battalion on realising that it was a photograph
that caused the death of the Old Man. Those who had waved their helmets and
laughed along felt it the most as they saw the falsehood in it. Soldiers will
always see through something like that.
The Old Man
might not have seen it at the time.
The turning
point came before they heard that the photograph had been published in a
newspaper under some headline about how good the morale of the troops was, and
then made into a postcard. That sealed it. But the bitterness started when the
new RSM arrived.
The Battalion
had been on its way to the front, redeploying after a night’s rest. There was
some joking amongst them, as they had heard that a push was coming. The
photographer noticed this. “I want to capture the smiles and the humour of
these men. They look happy, RSM.”
“They have a
good morale about them, I’ll give you that.” The ‘Old Man,’ the Regimental
Sergeant Major, the Battalion’s most Senior Non-Commissioned Officer, stood
fully six inches over the photographer. His words were strained out through a
vast moustache which twitched with pride. He was proud of the morale. It was
his battalion. He owned the men and their morale.
He loved and was
loved by almost every one of them, from the oldest hardest Senior
Non-Commissioned Officer to the newest, palest, shaking recruit, to whom any
harsh words were tempered with a whispered encouragement such as; ‘don’t worry
son, you’ll soon get the hang of things. Remember the parade ground. React to
sounds as you would to my voice. Look after yourself always and those around
you.’ Sometimes he even put his arm around their shoulders.
He had gathered
the men in a wide, dry crater which was strangely clear of war rubbish, and big
enough to accommodate the whole Battalion. They shouldn’t have been there, all
grouped together. But the RSM took the risk in order to have a private word
with the men and get the best setting for the photograph.
“I trust you all
had a good sleep last night,” he said in his deep resonating voice which he
hardly had to raise to address all five hundred men. “You will separate into
your companies over the edge of the crater and move into your own areas. We
move up after last light to relieve the; ahh humm.” He never disparaged another
battalion by name in public. “They are a tired and dispirited lot. You will
want to be like that many times in the future, as you have in the past…Try to
resist those feelings. Try to maintain your self-respect and your spirit. Believe
in yourselves… and look after each other.” He paused and searched the faces of
the men, his men.
“Now we have an
unusual event, a photograph, for posterity. I want you to make the best of
this, to show the people back home that we are up for this fight, any fight.
Some of you have been here before. Some of you are first timers. Good luck to
all of you.”
He walked back
to where the photographer had set up his stand, with the black box on top. “Now
are we all set, sir?”
“Yes, could they
just move forward as groups from the other side over there and perhaps they
could demonstrate their morale?” The photographer smiled at the energy in their
movement and anticipation. He knew he could make a good picture.
Author Information
As a writer you never accept things as they are. You always ask, why is this and what is my part in it?
I chose this ‘strapline’ for my facebook profile as it encapsulates my philosophy as a writer;
to be curious and questioning over everything. Certain passions guide and direct my writing.
For those I chose another principle;
Live (and write) by what is in your heart.
So my writing, all of it, comes from the heart, as all art must. Otherwise how can it be truth?
One of my passions is war and conflict, its sufferings and injustices,
its contradictions and the nature of mankind that accepts it.
I spent thirty-two years in the British Royal Marines.
Early on I was fortunate to read Remarque’s novel All Quiet on the Western Front,
one of the greatest war novels. Having an uncle killed in 1917 and the poetry of the war,
contrived to set my goal of writing about WW1.
But it wasn’t until the centenary of the war that I found my voice,
despite writing much in the intervening years.
My initial work was a play; All About the Boys, the last days of Wilfred Owen.
This was performed in 2014/16 and published in 2018. After that I embarked on another play;
The Cellist. Afterwards I realised that story of the Cellist’s friend would make a novel.
had always wanted to write novels so I wrote The Cellist’s Friend. It was published in 2018.
Then I went back to the play about the cellist and wrote it as a novel and prequel calling it;
A Cellist Soldier and this is my latest work.
I have also written another two plays, so far not staged and as a member of a SE London arts group,
Global Fusion Music and Arts, I have written other multi-media pieces for stage,
one of which, A Tribute to Martin Luther King, was performed at The Greenwich Theatre in October 2019.
Apart from a career in the Marines, I have worked in Railway Management and now run my own business,
a large pub/restaurant with my wife. Over two families I have five children and four grandchildren.
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