Fortunate Life

by Facey A.B.

Paperback, 1986

Collection

Status

Available

Tags

Publication

Penguin Australia (1986), Edition: Reset with Afterword, 348 pages

Description

Born in 1894, Facey lived the rough frontier life of a sheep farmer, survived the gore of Gallipoli, raised a family through the Depression and spent sixty years with his beloved wife, Evelyn. Despite enduring hardships we can barely imagine today, Facey always saw his life as a 'fortunate' one. A true classic of Australian literature, his simply written autobiography is an inspiration. It is the story of a life lived to the full - the extraordinary journey of an ordinary man.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1981

Physical description

8 inches

Barcode

130

ISBN

0140081674 / 9780140081671

User reviews

LibraryThing member Polaris-
The cover blurb promised "A true classic of Australian literature..." - which is thankfully not undeserved hyperbole at all. The author lived a life with many hardships - especially his poverty stricken remote rural childhood - but writes toward the end of his fascinating life with the perspective
Show More
of one who is not remotely bitter, but full of wisdom, and grace.

Born in the 1890s, Facey's orphan childhood coincided with a period of expansive white settlement in the southwest of Western Australia. The area that much of his story takes place in would become the famous wheat belt of that part of Australia. Living at first with his beloved Grandma and an Uncle who took him and his many siblings in, his life was tough and the work was unrelenting from about the time he was big enough to hold a horse.

After being sent away to work and then suffering at the hands of cruel and exploitative owner-employers, young Bertie eventually emerges from his Outback apprenticeship as a modest and hard working young man with a great love of, and skill with, animals and nature. What he lacked in formal education he more than made up for with his knowledge of the land and the rhythm of the seasons and the way to build up a homestead out of almost nothing (which he ends up having to achieve on several occasions for a variety of reasons).

*SPOILERS AHEAD*

It's hard to single out specific episodes or chapters that I liked best, but there is a longer than average section on his experiences working on a cattle drive for the first time - aged about 15 - that particularly stood out for me. The drive lasts for months and journeys deep, deep into the desert bush before circling around in a wide arc back to the west coast cattle market at Geraldton. The drama and the excitement and the pure graft involved, as well as the stunning and stark beauty of the Western Australian deserts really come across most vividly. During the drive, there is a heavy storm which causes a stampede. In the confusion Bert is separated from the others and after a day or two of sheltering from the terrible weather, eventually becomes completely lost. With almost no food and little else, he becomes increasingly weaker and confused. An elderly aboriginal Australian picks up his trail and ultimately saves Bertie's life. It is evident from the way his tale is told that Facey never had any truck with racial prejudices, or any kind of injustice for that matter.

*MORE SPOILERS...*

As the 20th century progresses Facey's young adulthood and coming of age inevitably culminate in the tragedy of the First World War. Leaving Perth with tens of thousands of his adventure-seeking compratiots, he is sent into the bloodbath of Gallipoli. Bert survived 4 months in the hellhole of the doomed Turkish beachhead. Two of his brothers, as well of course as many thousands of other brave ANZAC troops, sadly would not. He even survives being blown up, although his war wounds will blight him for the rest of his life in one way or another.

Returning home after the war, Bert can finally get on with his life and starts a family with his beloved wife in peace. Not without the further troubles that life has to throw at an uneducated war veteran, he manages to make his way in an ever-changing modern Australia as his family grows and his children eventually leave the home to have families of their own.

Despite the many hardships the author has to endure, A Fortunate Life was a wonderful book to read, and one that I really enjoyed. It is a great read for all ages and the ages. A. B. Facey's story really is a story of Australia and that great country's tough earlier pioneering generations. The humility that the author writes with is truly inspiring and this is indeed a genuine classic.
Show Less
LibraryThing member seldombites
A Fortunate Life is a first hand account of events that most of us have only read about in history books. Albert Facey has lived the kind of life that would have broken a lesser man. From the time he lost his father to Typhoid on the goldfields, through his time as an illiterate child working for
Show More
horse thieves, the Depression and both World Wars, Albert has had more than his fair share of tragedy. Yet all through this book he downplays his negative experiences, focusing on the positive and relaying his life in a fresh, humorous style that is both pleasant to read and hard to put down.. This is a uniquely Australian piece of literature and I found myself disappointed when I came to the end. A Fortunate Life is a must-read for all Australians.
Show Less
LibraryThing member blackjacket
This book has been on my "must read" list for a long time, if only for the fact that everyone around me has read it, never mind its canonical status in Australian literature.
A Fortunate Life is an epic yarn of one man's life, simply told, from the horrors of his mistreatment as a child farm worker
Show More
to the even greater horrors of his experiences at Gallipoli in World War One. Yet the horrors are leavened with stories of humour and great achievement in farming the unforgiving country of rural Western Australia, raising a big family during the Depression and teaching himself to read and write.
The standout chapters for me were the author's recollections of his six months on a cattle drive through central Western Australia in 1909. when he was not yet 15 years old. This included a harrowing week lost and alone in the bush, surviving on grass and scavenged kangaroo meat, culminating in an encounter with Aboriginal Australians that not only saved his life but altered his perceptions.
Facey genuinely feels "thrilled" looking back on his life, despite the terrible hardships endured, because he relished a challenge and never faltered in his belief at "having a go at something", always "ready to take a risk and try something new. If it worked out, well good, if not I would just try something else."
A few chapters into this book and I was shaking my head, asking myself "How much more can this bloke stand?" I was amazed at his resilience, not just in surviving but in creating such a full and fulfilling life.
Highly recommended. A must read, that's if you haven't read it already.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Schmerguls
This is a stunningly powerful autobiograaphy by a man who was born in 1894 in Australia, whose father died when he was two and whose mother had very little to do with him. He worked very hard as a child and received no schooling, being unable to read or write till he was a teenager. In 1914 he
Show More
enlisted and was sent to Gallipolli, where he had a fearsome time and eventually was seriously wounded. After the war he married a woman who had sent him socks at Gallipolli, having encountered her in a chance meeting on a street in Australia. The had a bad time often but had eght children and went through rough times--among other evils their house burned down and their Depression years were filled with adversity. Yet he calls his life a fortunate one and he was exceptionally able to deal with the many adversities he lived through. The book is very simply written but in its starkness I found it absorbing reading. One can understand why it is deemed a classic Australian epic.
Show Less
LibraryThing member TimBazzett
I am a sucker for a well-told memoir, and I particularly love those by people I've never heard of. Well, I'd never heard of A.B. (Albert Barnett) Facey, but that's mostly because I don't live in Australia. Because in the past thirty-some years his memoir, A FORTUNATE LIFE, has taken on the status
Show More
of a classic in that country. And here's another thing that intrigued me: having never gone to school, Facey was functionally illiterate until he was nearly twenty years old, and was over eighty when he began writing down his life story. I love it when old guys write their life stories, maybe because I was sixty when I wrote my first memoir.

Albert Facey's story of his life in frontier Western Australia was a fascinating, even mesmerizing one. Born into a large family in 1894, Facey's father died when he was only a few years old and his mother married again and left him (and other siblings) to be raised by his grandmother and an aunt and uncle. At eight he was literally "farmed out" to another family who abused and neglected him. Forced to do difficult farm labor and living in filth and rags, Facey learned early to be self-sufficient and to work his scrawny little butt off to survive. The family he'd been indentured to turned out to be one of criminals, cattle thieves and drunks. When he managed to escape that situation, Albert's subsequent jobs with other, kinder families, got gradually better, and by the time he was fourteen he was knowledgeable and tough enough to manage a farm by himself. He learned about wheat farming and working with all manner of stock - sheep, pigs, horses, poultry. As a teenager he was cook's helper driving over two thousand head of cattle for hundreds of miles to a railhead for sale. Along the way he became lost in the wilderness for a week following a stampede and would have starved had he not been found and rescued by friendly Aborigines. He drove spikes for a new railroad line for a time. He was also a professional pugilist with a traveling troupe of boxers, possessing a perfect left jab, and he never lost a fight.

In 1914 he volunteered for the army and was badly wounded at the infamous battle of Gallipoli, and was invalided out of the service with a disability pension. Shortly thereafter he married his wife, Evelyn - a marriage that produced several children and lasted fifty-nine years, until his wife's death in 1976. During that time Facey worked numerous jobs despite his war injuries, which often periodically landed him back in hospital, and endured the hardships of the Great Depression of the 1930s. Three of his sons enlisted in the army for service in WWII, and one of them was killed.

And hey, I'm not really giving anything away here. I'm only skimming the surface of Facey's life in the briefest kind of outline. Facey tells his story in the most straightforward manner, filled with fascinating details and anecdotes, with no trace of self-pity anywhere. And he is the most natural of storytellers, obviously a child of the oral tradition. What you are reading in A FORTUNATE LIFE is history - history of the most personal and valuable sort. Because, for his time, Albert Facey was a kind of Everyman. And the reading world is very fortunate indeed that Albert Facey took the time, with the encouragement of his devoted wife, to set it all down for us. A.B. Facey died in 1982, nine months after his book was published. He was 87 years old.

This is simply one helluva good read. VERY highly recommended.
Show Less
LibraryThing member SashaM
Why did no-one ever shove this book in my face and tell me how brilliant it is???! Do yourself a favour and read it now! It will get you right from the start. An absolutely fascinating account of life in pioneer Australia from being a boy on the gold fields, a teen working for his keep to a young
Show More
man enduring the horrors of WWI at Gallipoli and then to marriage and getting by during the depression of the 30's. This book will take you a journey through the hard but ultimately fortunate life of a man who will show you that with the best attitude your life is in your control.
So many times in his life things could have turned out differently or Mr Facey could have given up but this is just a wonderful life and told in a clear, unique and modest voice.
Show Less
LibraryThing member xiWen
This book is truly inspiring. The story line is amazing with great descriptions of Western Australia. What a life. Made me cry.
LibraryThing member devilish2
We read this story aloud as a family. It's a very simply told tale of a man's life in Western Australia from around the early 1900s or thereabouts. It's not a work of literary genius, but it's a fabulous portrayal of a life in those times.
LibraryThing member Figgles
Finally I've read this West Australian classic. I've recently been discussing with friends how easy it is to fall into the trap of assuming that mores and attitudes in the past are the same as in the present. This isn't the case, and although we can only view the past from our point of view, it's
Show More
valuable to try to see it through the eyes of someone who was there. And boy, was A B Facey there! Worked (today we would say exploited) as a boy on the new settler's farms in the wheatbelt, cook's assistant in a cattle drive in the Murchison, on the front line at Gallipoli, returning permanently disabled, yet he still remained able to call himself fortunate. If you've not read this you need to!
Show Less
LibraryThing member lesleynicol
I don't regard his life as fortunate but it was a wonderful book about times gone by in Australia.
LibraryThing member dalzan
This is the extraordinary life of an ordinary man. It is the story of Albert Facey, who lived with simple honesty, compassion and courage. A parentless boy who started work at eight on the rough West Australian frontier, he struggled as an itinerant rural worker, survived the gore of Gallipoli, the
Show More
loss of his farm in the Depression, the death of his son in World War II and that of his beloved wife after sixty devoted years - yet he felt that his life was fortunate. Facey's life story was published when he was eighty-seven.
Show Less
LibraryThing member DaptoLibrary
Our group had an interesting discussion on the life and times of A.B. Facey this month. We were generally agreed that he was a special man who took what life handed him and did the best he could with it. Things were not easy back then and we all acknowledged that the general mentality of taking
Show More
responsibility for oneself was common, but Facey had a remarkable ability to ride through the hard times with a positive attitude. Whether this was an individual trait he was born with or a result of early childhood experiences, we were not able to discern.

In any case, we were all impressed with his writing skills, considering his late education, and believe he did a more than admiral job of recording his memories. This all led to a great discussion on the huge differences to today’s generation of young people … those who have seen little or no tough times and how they perceive their world and their place in it, role models, class conscience and in ‘the less you have, the better you are’ theory. All very interesting and stimulating!

The publish date of A Fortunate Life was a surprise to most of us, believing it to be around the ‘60s or ‘70s when in fact it was not published until 1982, just a year before Facey’s death. This made his memory and ability to recall so much of his life even more remarkable in our eyes, and places it firmly in the list of must reads … for all generations.
Show Less
LibraryThing member TheWasp
Albert Facey was born in Victoria (Australia) in 1894. His two older brothers went to the gold fields with their father to find work, but died before Albert had turned 2. His mother followed to care for the two sons leaving Albert and his two other brothers and two sisters in the care of their
Show More
grandmother. She never returned. Times were tough and Albert's grandmother sold her small acreage and moved them to Western Australia to live with their Uncle and his family on their settlement. They lived in utter proverty. When Albert was 8 he was sent to a neighbouring farm as a live-in farm hand and thus commence his life of fending for himself. Over the next 10 years he worked clearing land for cultivation, tending farm animals, droving, laying railways. He had no education. He fought in Gallipoli.
When Bert was 82 he wrote his story. He says that when he was very young he was a bit lonely, but his story is told as if he he talking to you. He does not complain about what he did not have but was thankful for all the kindness that were shown to him throughout his life. He describes the early settlers life of poverty and the stuggle of life on the land with a detail not often shown in books on wealthy settlers, and he describes a way of life, an particularly and attitude towards children which would be unthinkable today. Bert met and married his beloved wife of almost 60 years after he returned from Gallipoli. Life was never easy for them but Bert was thankful that he had a "Fortunate Life"
Show Less
LibraryThing member Johanne
This book captivated me.
Page: 0.5192 seconds