Constructive gadfly
Published on November 9, 2007 By stevendedalus In Blogging
 

Happy Veterans' Day in Honor of those of the Greatest Generation and all that followed

Vol I: An Odyssey of Childhood & Early Youth is a fictional account, together with personal, dramatic license, of the era of the Great Depression and the beginning of World War II. In the main it focuses on the joys and fears of children and families in desperate times. The novel portrays the character of several families and develops the search for identity among the children. Through this generates a rather implicit triangle among the three principal, maturing characters.

Reviews from The Internet 

A Tale Of Love & War ; Volume I: An Odyssey of Childhood & Early Youth

A Look at the Greatest Generation
LeeAnna Art Teacher
FL
(3/24/2006)

 

Before the Great Crash the Cory family moves from a Bronx apartment to rent a bungalow in Queens, which seemed in contrast virtually rural to them. The father loses his job, but being good with his hands picks up many jobs as a carpenter repairing and renovating homes in a wealthy section; the mother, Bridget, also pitches in minding a child and doing laundry. Meanwhile there are chapters pertaining to the growth of the young boy, Johnny, and his friends at play and school. There is a strong sense of growing up and schooling in the 1930s. Johnny’s father dies. The lad crawls into himself for a time—distant from his close friends, Sally and Janie, both of whom react differently to the death. As he approaches his teens, Johnny is ambivalent in his feelings for Janie and Sally: a rather strange triangle evolves — conflict of soul and heart. Ray, Johnny’s brother, joins RAF well before Pearl Harbor. Bridget reacts: "Jesus, Mary and Joseph, I’d rather you had as strong a calling for the priesthood! But, no, you’re Johnny Cory’s boy, all right—except he’s spinning in his grave right now in that you’re going off to fight for England!" Meanwhile, Pamela—the voice of war from an English refugee— describes the Blitz to their 9th grade class. She becomes close to Sally who uses her to start up a war-effort club. As Johnny gets closer to seventeen, he is anxious to join the Marines, but not before he renews his relationship with Sally who refers to him as her Essex in exile. Sally is temporarily shattered by her grandmother’s death. Janie overcomes her tormenting resistance to wakes. After Pearl Harbor, Janie, always a backdrop, in light of Sally’s dominance, inconspicuously matures: she criticizes Sally for melodramatically viewing the war as stimulating. Janie notes, “What bothers me more are the girls [at school]; the way they brag about their boyfriends being in the service and can’t wait for them to get home on leave so they can date and hang on the arm of one in uniform.” A touch of irony here considering she couldn’t, though deeply troubled, be prouder when Johnny enters the Marine Corps. While he is away the girls and his other friends illustrate rapid maturity in the war effort and concern for him in the thick of battle. What follows are extraordinary scenes of combat, and intriguing revelations and conflict on the home front. Both volumes dramatically portray the “greatest generation.”

First Review

The sense of time and place beyond description is by actions and perceptions of an assortment of characters at school, play and work while coping with a difficult economy, underlying questions of death, further triggered by the approaching war.

The reality of war comes to the forefront of the children’s awareness when an English girl, who experienced the Blitz, joins their ninth grade class. Then deeply implanted in the consciousness when the protagonist joins the Marines.

Author Bio

Born at home in the Bronx, Throgs Neck, long before the bridge was built and grew up in the Depression. In early ‘44, I joined the Marine Corps. And was in the first wave at Okinawa. After the war, thanks to the GI Bill, I went to college and later became a high school English teacher, and am now retired.

 

 

ISBN 1413754872

A Reader’s Review

Vol II: War & The Home Front is a fictional piece on the war effort at home and South Pacific combat in World War II. It focuses on the influence of war — together with supportive families — on young people abruptly maturing.

In addition, the novel dramatizes horrific, heroic and psychological drama of Marines on the front lines.

The backdrop of the home front, is united activity in behalf of the nation and loved ones overseas. The forefront explores the beauty and anxiety war plays with respect to love, faith and loyalty. It was also suspenseful.

 


Comments
on Dec 23, 2007
I have to face up to it--no one cares anymore.
on Feb 23, 2008
I suppose I chose the wrong category back in Nov. Anyway, I've been a stranger lately and am getting my feet wet in the new system.