Featured Release Title “John Jess Seeker of Justice” (The HMAS Voyager Story)
Author-Elizabeth Jess
Sid Harta Publishers...
Melbourne Australia
Author-Elizabeth Jess
Sid Harta Publishers...
Melbourne Australia
EAN13: 978-1-925230-88-8
Pages-334
RRP $29.95
Classification-Australian History
VOYAGER/MELBOURNE
50 Years On
“The truth must be found out and it must be told. Otherwise the people of Australia will repudiate this parliament forever.”
—John Jess, 1967
HMAS Melbourne and HMAS Voyager collided off Jervis Bay with great loss of life on the evening of 10 February, 1964. The subsequent Voyager Royal Commission perpetrated an appalling injustice, protecting those responsible and persecuting those who were not. Federal Parliamentarian John Jess was one of the few willing to speak up at the time, putting his career on the line and establishing himself as an honest, uncompromising ‘seeker of truth’.
Jess described the first book ever written about Voyager by Admiral Hickling as “clearly piercing the darkness.” John Jess, Seeker of Justice goes a step further. This book is not an interpretation of history. It is history being allowed to speak for itself. In his own words, which Liberal parliamentarian Edward St John termed “the voice of Truth which can never be still or silenced” John Jess sheds even more light upon the devastating collision.
A re-examination of the first royal commission, particularly the prohibited publication pages of transcript, sheds light on the collision and the conclusion proposes a reason for the incident that has never previously been advanced. No book comes closer to solving the mystery of this tragedy that cost eighty-two lives. No book has word-for-word the conversations that went on behind closed doors between politicians and prime ministers and the pressures and influences that existed between the powers that be.
If a film were to be made about Voyager, this book would be essential reading, as nothing has been glossed over, it has real conversations, real quotes; the true story has finally been told.
Pages-334
RRP $29.95
Classification-Australian History
VOYAGER/MELBOURNE
50 Years On
“The truth must be found out and it must be told. Otherwise the people of Australia will repudiate this parliament forever.”
—John Jess, 1967
HMAS Melbourne and HMAS Voyager collided off Jervis Bay with great loss of life on the evening of 10 February, 1964. The subsequent Voyager Royal Commission perpetrated an appalling injustice, protecting those responsible and persecuting those who were not. Federal Parliamentarian John Jess was one of the few willing to speak up at the time, putting his career on the line and establishing himself as an honest, uncompromising ‘seeker of truth’.
Jess described the first book ever written about Voyager by Admiral Hickling as “clearly piercing the darkness.” John Jess, Seeker of Justice goes a step further. This book is not an interpretation of history. It is history being allowed to speak for itself. In his own words, which Liberal parliamentarian Edward St John termed “the voice of Truth which can never be still or silenced” John Jess sheds even more light upon the devastating collision.
A re-examination of the first royal commission, particularly the prohibited publication pages of transcript, sheds light on the collision and the conclusion proposes a reason for the incident that has never previously been advanced. No book comes closer to solving the mystery of this tragedy that cost eighty-two lives. No book has word-for-word the conversations that went on behind closed doors between politicians and prime ministers and the pressures and influences that existed between the powers that be.
If a film were to be made about Voyager, this book would be essential reading, as nothing has been glossed over, it has real conversations, real quotes; the true story has finally been told.
ReplyDeleteElizabeth McCarthy is indeed the true daughter of John Jess, the Member of Parliament who displayed heroic fortitude — at the cost of a brilliant political career — and high moral courage to find the truth of the pivotal peacetime disaster of the Royal Australian Navy: the sinking of the destroyer, HMAS Voyager, in a collision with the RAN flagship, the carrier HMAS Melbourne. Her book is rigorously and dispassionately detailed in its exposé of the sordid cover-up, and yet this is an immensely readable and valuable window into an event which still colours the way the RAN operates. Her portrayal vividly reignites the sense of that time in Australian politics, 1964 to 1968. John Jess, and his colleague, Edward St. John, were the conscience of Parliament: bless them for their contribution to honest governance, and God Bless Elizabeth McCarthy for honouring those political and naval victims who honoured us all with their efforts to safeguard our society.
— Gregory Copley, AM, historian, author, and President of the International Strategic Studies Association, Washington, DC.
Riveting read
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