[1] Sisters of War was written by John Misto, produced by Andrew Wiseman and directed by Brendan Maher.
[3] Sisters of War was inspired by real events and based on Rod Miller's manuscript The Lost Women of Rabaul.
Kruger had deliberately written the diary with cryptic prose so as to confuse any Japanese soldier or casual reader who might have discovered it.
Miller first met Sister Berenice Twohill and Lorna Johnston in 1997 and through them was able to meet and interview most of the surviving nurses and officers of Lark Force.
[5][6] Vunapope, a small Catholic mission station on New Britain, is captured by Japanese forces in January 1942.