Devastation Road
- 384 páginas
- 14 horas de lectura
A dramatic, compelling and poignant WWII road novel that, like the stories of Pat Barker or Sebastian Faulks' Birdsong, evokes the tragedy of war
Jason Hewitt crea narrativas con una urgencia cautivadora, explorando a menudo temas de identidad y la búsqueda de pertenencia. Su prosa se caracteriza por estudios perspicaces de personajes y un impulso narrativo que arrastra al lector al centro de la historia. Los antecedentes de Hewitt en historia y teatro informan sus tramas ricamente detalladas y diálogos vívidos, añadiendo capas de profundidad a su obra. Su escritura profundiza en las complejidades de la conexión humana y los dilemas morales que ponen a prueba nuestra comprensión del bien y del mal.



A dramatic, compelling and poignant WWII road novel that, like the stories of Pat Barker or Sebastian Faulks' Birdsong, evokes the tragedy of war
H.J. Hewitt's classic study looks beyond the succession of campaigns, marches, raids, sieges and pitched battles that punctuated the long reign of Edward III. He focuses instead on the organization of war - how Edward's armies were raised and trained, how they were transported and supplied, how they fought, and how their fighting affected the lives of the civilians of the time. The author's lucid and readable analysis gives a fascinating insight into the wars of Edward III against the Scots and the French, and his pioneering work is a key text for the study of medieval military history.
July 1940. Eleven-year-old Lydia walks through a village in rural Suffolk on a baking hot day. She is wearing a gas mask. The shops and houses are empty, windows boarded up and sandbags green with mildew, the village seemingly deserted. Leaving it behind, she strikes off down a country lane through the salt marshes to a large Edwardian house -- the house she grew up in. Lydia finds it empty too, the windows covered in black-out blinds. Her family is gone. Late that night he comes, a soldier, gun in hand and heralding a full-blown German invasion. There are, he explains to her, certain rules she must now abide by. He won't hurt Lydia, but she cannot leave the house. Is he telling the truth? What is he looking for? Why is he so familiar? And how does he already know Lydia's name? Eerie, thrilling and piercingly sad, The Dynamite Room evokes the great tradition of war classics yet achieves a strikingly original and contemporary resonance. Hypnotically compelling, it explores, in the most extreme of circumstances, the bonds we share that make us human.