On July 21, 1942, a large Japanese reconnaissance mission landed along
the north-eastern coastline of Papua, soon turning into an all-out
attempt to capture Port Morseby. This is the powerful story of the three
weeks of battle by a small Australian militia force to keep the Japanese
at bay. Outnumbered by at least three to one, they fought to hold the
Kokoda Plateau--the gateway to the Owen Stanleys. Desperately short of
ammunition and food and stranded in the fetid swamps and lowland
jungles, they did everything they could to keep the Kokoda airstrip out
of Japanese hands. Not far away, desperately trying to reach the
Australians, were two groups of Anglican missionaries trapped behind
enemy lines. With each passing day the parties grew, joined by lost
Australian soldiers and downed U.S. airmen. Using letters, diaries, and
other first-hand accounts, David W. Cameron has for the first time
written a detailed, compelling account of what occurred at the northern
foot of the Owen Stanleys in late July and early August 1942.