This image is the cover for the book The Luck of Thirteen Wanderings and Flight Through Montenegro and Serbia, The World At War

The Luck of Thirteen Wanderings and Flight Through Montenegro and Serbia, The World At War

Excerpt: "We had endeavoured to ward off typhoid by initiating a sort of sanitary vigilance committee, having first sacked the chief of police: we had laid drains, which the chief Serbian engineer said he would pull up as soon as we had gone away. We had helped in the plans of a very necessary slaughter-house, which Mr. Berry was going to present to the town. There was an excuse for Jan's desire. The English papers had been howling about the typhus months after the disease had been chased out by English, French, and American doctors, who had disinfected the country till it reeked of formalinPg 3 and sulphur; shoals of devoted Englishwomen were still pouring over, generously ready to risk their lives in a danger which no longer existed. Our own unit, which had dwindled to a comfortable—almost a family—number, with Mr. Berry as father, had been suddenly enlarged by an addition of ten. These ten complicated things, they all naturally wanted work, and we had cornered all the jobs.”

Cora Gordon

Jan Gordon (born Godfrey Jervis Gordon in Berkshire, England, 1882–1944), an English printmaker, painter/draughtsman, and journalist/critic; and his wife, Cora Gordon (born Cora Josephine Turner in Buxton, England, also known as Jo Gordon, 1879–1950), an English artist, writer, and musician, were prominent northern hemisphere artists who were active in the first half of the 20th century. (Wikipedia)

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