The daredevil of the army
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A memoir of the author's WWI experiences, in which he served as a dispatch rider and 'buzzer' for the British Army. The author demonstrated considerable courage, as well as formidable prose skills, and was wounded several times for his trouble.
The inscription on the inside cover of this book aptly read: "Death, capture, accidents - any may overtake him on his road, but none may deter or terrify him. 'The Daredevil' - that is the name he earned in the early days of the war, when General French credited him with the salvation of the British Forces. And so I introduce him to you, read - 'the Daredevil', with his coadjutor, equally daring, the 'Buzzer,' the men who supply the 'nerves' and much of the 'Nerve' of the modern fighting army."
Already an seafaring adventurer who had explored Africa and Bolivia by the time he joined the British Army, the author went to become a journalist in America and to work variously on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as to spend time in Russia as part of Herbert Hoover's famine relief efforts in the early 1920's.
Austin Patrick Corcoran died on March 27th, 1928 in New York. He was 38 years old.