Glory is a story of the British experience of Gallipoli, written by accomplished British author Rachel Billington. Billington’s novel is inspired by her grandfather’s experiences of Gallipoli and was devised after Billington thoroughly researched her grandfather’s war record. Tragically, Billington’s grandfather died fighting in the Gallipoli campaign, along with some many other British soldiers before and after him. Billlington describes sadly how her grandmother refused to believe her husband had died at the front. Instead, she pinned her hopes on him being captured and held in a camp or Turkish hospital. It is the rawness of this personal experience that feeds into Billington’s novel Glory. Glory intertwines the experiences of three British citizens ripped apart by the effects of war. The lives of these men and women become twisted together by fate and the Gallipoli experience. Billington combines class differentiation of the war experience, the British politics that resulted in this unsuccessful assault, the gruesome battles, along with gentler themes of war time love and the agony of life on the home front awaiting from news from Anzac Cove. An epic tale of heroism, resilience, the will to survive, loss and love, Glory presents a fine standpoint on the Anglo experience of Gallipoli.