Fortunate Life

Facey, A.B. A Fortunate Life. Viking, 1981.

Reason read: we celebrate Veteran’s Day on November 11th. I wanted to celebrate Bert Facey as a veteran of World War I by reading his autobiography.

Facey’s autobiography is broken out into six different parts starting in 1884 and ending in 1976. His life started in tragedy when his father died when he was two years old. He and his siblings were sent to live with their grandparents but their grandfather passed just two years later. Facey’s grandmother tried to keep the family together, but by the time Facey was nine, he was farmed out to another family where he was told lies and horrible abused to the point of near death. By the time he was thirteen, Facey had lived with three different families, each just as terrible as the one before. A year later, he started to learn how to read while helping a cattle rancher move his livestock to a different region of Western Australia. Every time, Facey proved to be a hard worker who could learn new skills quickly. Early in his teenaged years, Facey learned these traits were keen survival skills. Knowing how to judge a character was also important to him and saved his life several times over, including when dealing with his money-hungry and manipulative mother or the time he had to fistfight a man three times his size.
True to the memories of the elderly, Facey could recall his childhood clearly and focused more detail on these formative years. His time spent as a boxer, soldier, and employee of a tram company are not as detailed or drawn out. Even his days as a union man and political leader are not given the same attention. His marriage and subsequent fatherhood of eight children are not given a great deal of narrative, either. However, it is interesting to note his remarkable relationship with his wife, Evelyn. As a complete stranger, she sent him socks during his military deployment in Gallipoli. When they met years later, they court, marry, and go on to have several children. Evelyn was his first and only love and they were married for nearly sixty years. Facey ends his autobiography after the event of her death.

Quotes of character, “…I never asked him anything of his business because if he wished to tell me, he would” (p 190) and “A sort of love and trust in one another developed in the trenches” (p 281).

Author fact: Facey lived for nine months after publication of A Fortunate Life. I hope that he was proud of his achievements.

Book trivia: the majority of illustrations in A Fortunate Life are advertisements for products like velvet soap, Oh Boy Brand flour, Mills and Ware biscuits, Amgoorie tea, Hugh Nichols’ suits, Trewhella’s Monkey Grubber (whatever that is), A.W. Barlow Shoe Company, and Colemane & Sons eucalyptus oil. I could go on and on.
A Fortunate Life was made into a television miniseries and there is a short YouTube video about A.B. Facey’s life, as well.

Music: “Son of the Sea”.

BookLust Twist: from Book Lust To Go in the obvious chapter called “Australia: the Land of Oz (nonfiction)” (p 26).

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