Bretherton
Khaki or Field Grey?
by W. F. Morris
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
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Pub Date Aug 02 2016 | Archive Date Sep 02 2016
Description
In November 1918, as the Germans are in their final retreat, a British raiding party under fire follows the sound of piano music and stumbles across an eerie scene in a ruined chateau. A German officer lies dead at the keys, next to a beautiful woman, also deceased, in full evening dress. But what makes their discovery especially strange is that the man is the spitting image of G. B. Bretherton, a British officer missing in action.
This tale of mystery and identity, first published in 1930, is not only an authentic account of the brutal conditions at the battlefront, it’s also a remarkable thriller with a twisting, unusual plot that earned it comparisons to John Buchan and the best espionage writers. The Morning Post called it “one of the best of the English war novels”—while Sir John Squire, the influential editor of the London Mercury, went a step further and labeled it “undoubtedly the best.” Eric Ambler, the iconic author of such classics as A Coffin for Dimitrios and Journey into Fear, considered it one of the five best spy novels of all time.
Fans of war stories and suspense novels alike—and readers of modern WWI tales like Robert Olen Butler’s The Star of Istanbul—will find themselves caught up in this lost gem from the Great War era.
Advance Praise
“...a mystery as exciting as a good detective story and an extraordinarily vivid account of trench-warfare.” —The Sunday Times
“ W.F. Morris’ Bretherton [is] an adventure-mystery war-novel with an admirably ingenious and leak-proof plot. This book combines a brilliant exercise of creative imagination with a remarkable ability to reproduce, vividly, first-hand experiences, and there is one brief battle-scene…which is memorable.” —AC Ward
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781504040303 |
PRICE | $0.00 (USD) |
Featured Reviews
I had hopes for this story, billed as an historical mystery, set during The Great War and written only a decade later. Early in the book, there were a couple of moments where the setting captured me, especially the narrator's description of his feelings of vulnerability on learning that the war was to end in only a few hours. How was he to protect himself during that time? This was well done.
But then! The prose simply seemed to falter, become just pedestrian, workman-like, with no sense of energy or "joy" in the writing to pull me along. And the descriptions of the soldiers themselves began to seem more and more like caricatures rather than like people. I realize that this is a novel, but I still expect it to be populated by people. As for the mystery itself, it did not grab me enough to keep me interested and reading. There are simply too many other books waiting.
1.5*
A copy of this book was provided by the publisher through NetGalley in return for an honest review.