Home Base: poems – life as a regular force cadet 1964–1966

Keith Westwater

$25.00

As the train pulled away from the station,
He felt as though a guillotine was slicing off a part of his life.
What he was heading for, though, just had to be better
Than what he was leaving behind.

ISBN: 978-1-98-859546-7 Categories: , Tags: , , , , , , , ,

About the book

Keith’s stepmother ‘Maw’ gives him an ultimatum – at fifteen he either leaves school to work or joins the army. So, Keith departs Auckland and reports to the Waiōuru military camp, enlisting as a regular force cadet.

Home Base is a snapshot of Keith Westwater’s boy-soldier life in the New Zealand Army during the 1960s. From a motherless and peripatetic childhood in No One Home, the sequel Home Base is where Keith finally finds a place to call home: underneath Mount Ruapehu’s shadow and amongst his fellow cadets.

From spit-polished ‘brightly black’ boots to doing ‘the marchie marchie’, Home Base is a candid and often humorous look at the lives of Regular Force Cadets. It’s also a memoir of Keith’s adolescence depicted through handwritten diary entries, photographs, maps and poems.

Praise for Keith’s previous book:
No One Home is a seeking, examining work, as concerned with absence as it is with presence, and the losses in both … elegantly produced, the book has a sober and quiet beauty, ‘moments of glad grace’.” — Takahē

About the author

Lower Hutt poet Keith Westwater has received or been shortlisted for awards in New Zealand, Australia and Ireland, and has been selected for ten anthologies. He’s published three previous collections of poetry and a chapbook. Keith writes about his work on his blog, Some Place Else.

Specifications

Dimensions: 150 x 190 mm
Number of pages: 200
Binding: soft cover