From Shell Shock to PTSD

The Hidden Cost of War for Australian Soldiers

Published by Big Sky Publishing
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

‘For the first time… the collective story of the tens of thousands of Australian soldiers who returned home with mental injuries… Their wounds were no less real because they were often hidden.’
— Major General John H. Pearn AO RFD, Former Surgeon-General, Australian Defence Force

‘A landmark contribution to understanding the human cost of Australia’s military history.’

Across more than a century of conflict, Australian soldiers have returned home carrying invisible wounds. From Gallipoli to the conflicts of the twenty-first century, what was once called ‘shell-shock’ or ‘war neurosis’ is now recognised as post-traumatic stress disorder, but its presence has remained constant.

In From Shell-Shock to PTSD, eminent military–medical historian Ian Howie-Willis draws on decades of research, extensive military and medical records, and a wide body of official inquiries to trace 125 years of psychological injury across the Australian Army. He reveals how trauma has been recognised, misunderstood, redefined and managed over time, often slowly, and sometimes at great human cost.

Set against the most recent national examinations of defence and veteran wellbeing and grounded in the lived experiences of soldiers and their families, this is both a definitive history and a timely reflection. It shows that while the language and treatments have evolved, the underlying reality has remained strikingly consistent.
As Australia continues to confront these challenges, one question endures. How can a nation prepare for war while reckoning with its lasting human toll?

‘We didn’t just lose him to war — we lived with its aftermath every day.’
‘Seventeen years of service… and all we were given at the end was a notebook and a sick husband.’
‘Each suicide sends ripples through families, friends and communities — hundreds of lives changed forever.’
From submissions to the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide, as featured in ‘Shining a Light’

About The Author

Dr Ian Howie-Willis is a professional historian based in Canberra, where he has lived for 51 years. His last book was Operation Postern: The Battle to Recapture Lae, 1943 (Big Sky Publishing, 2023). He grew up in Melbourne, where he began his working life as a journalist. He later turned to teaching and later still became a public servant. He holds postgraduate degrees from universities in Australia, the UK and Papua New Guinea. He has been married to Margaret (née Vale), a retired school principal, for 63 years. They have three married children and six surviving grown-up grandchildren. The author lives in Wanniassa, ACT. 

Product Details

  • Publisher: Big Sky Publishing (September 1, 2026)
  • Length: 432 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781923720138

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