Masters se destacó como una voz literaria poderosa, transformando sus extensas experiencias militares en narrativas cautivadoras. Su escritura se nutre profundamente de su servicio en el Ejército Indio y de los combates durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, marcada por una profunda comprensión de las realidades del conflicto. A través de su obra, Masters explora magistralmente temas de coraje, pérdida y resiliencia humana frente a la adversidad. Su estilo, caracterizado por una honestidad inquebrantable y observaciones perspicaces, resuena en los lectores que buscan historias auténticas y conmovedoras.
Enter the world of the Dragon Knights!Evil General Vayn gained power twelve
years ago on the Islands of Alariss, defeating the Dragon Knights, an elite
force with the ability to transform into dragons, using dark magic to bind
them in their human forms.
Part Two Of Two PartsBY THE GREEN OF SPRING is the third and final volume in John Masters' trilogy Loss of Eden.The trilogy, starting with NOW GOD BE THANKED, depicts the impact of WW I on British life. HEART OF WAR carries the saga into the conflict's desperate middle years. BY THE GREEN OF SPRING brings the war to its close and casts the survivors (half the war-time generation was killed) on the barren shores of peace."An impressive, large-scale work. Masters never shifts his focus from the human element...his storytelling gifts, convincing characterization and skilled organizaton have never been more tellingly displayed." (John Barkham Reviews)
The memoirs of Field-Marshal Sir John Durham provoke a profound crisis within his family and the British government as the layers of secrecy and lies are peeled away from his decades long Army career and personal life.
January, 1914. They had suffered at the hands of the Raj; now they were being asked to die in its name. Reinforcing all that Prince Krishna Ram admires about Britain, in Warren Bateman it seems the Ravi Lancers have a decent commanding officer. A professional soldier, when the Rajah’s heir volunteers the Ravi Lancers to accompany the Indian forces destined for Europe, it is Bateman who guides their path. In the opening months of the First World War, the fields of Flanders could not have been a tougher proving ground for them. But battle affects men in different ways, and while the bloody carnage draws Krishna ever closer to his men, Bateman retreats behind rigid military patriotism. As they slowly forge themselves from a prince’s private army into a unit as effective as any regulars on the front line, Bateman tramples over their customs and traditions. A clash with Krishna is inevitable. In the trenches far from home, the tear between allegiance to their own ancient deities and their debt to an alien god of war starts to cause a wound deeper than any man-made weapon. Dying for a cause not their own, every man of the Ravi Lancers faces the ultimate choice: who do they follow? Making their fateful choice, the consequences for all will be severe; nothing will be the same again.
Slightly scuffed paperback with lightly worn spine ends and leading corners. Page block has minor marks. Pages are clean and binding is sound throughout. Illustrated by documentary photographs. T
India, 1948. Margaret Wood and Rodney Savage are reunited, a year on from their first meeting on Independence Day. Margaret is a missionary and a nurse who came to India with her husband. But he has died of a terrible fever, and that has left her, questioning her faith and devotion, to carry out the mission alone. Savage, who has known, lived and fought in India for years, is bewildered by a country he no longer recognizes, and, now rootless, he struggles to find his place in it. As the two grow closer, the India that they knew falls apart. Savage is rejected from the village tribe that called him 'Gora Raja' - the White King. They tell him he is a danger to the people of India and when the village general dies in prison, he is accused of murder. Wanted as a criminal, Savage must turn his back on the India he once knew, and find his way in this strange land. For this was not the India of the Rajput knights who had fought against Jason Savage, but Nehru’s India. And it was a country that no longer needed the British...