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Kevin Major St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada |
No
Man's
Land
ISBN 0-385-25579-9 , Doubleday, $12.95
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The Story: | Kevin Major reaches a new milestone in his career with this publication. Set in France during World War I, it pulls us into the lives of the young men of the Newfoundland Regiment at rest in the village of Louvencourt, preparing to set out for the trenches and what will come to be known as the Battle of the Somme.
Second lieutenant Alan Hayward and his brash fellow officer, Clarke, together with young Martin and the other men heading into battle, wait out the hours to the final whistle. Longing for their homeland, frustrated by the lack of knowledge about what lies ahead, they stand resolutely on the firesteps as their pocket watches tick away to zero hour. A classic war novel, the book is equally effective in its portrayal of the camaraderie and unnatural quiet before the storm, as in its graphic account of the fight to make it through the barbed wire and sweep of machine-gun bullets across no man's land. Two hundred and seventy-two of the young men from the Newfoundland Regiment who went over the top on the morning of July 1, 1916 lost their lives. The regiment suffered more casualties than any other unit on the battlefield and the island from which it came lost many of the men who would have been its future leaders. No community in Newfoundland escaped the consequences of the regiment's attempt to drive the enemy from Beaumont Hamel. It was the single greatest disaster in the island's history. |
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| Reviews | The Toronto Star | "As a literary evocation of the Great War, No Man's Land belongs on the same shelf as David Macfarlane's The Danger Tree and Timothy Findley's The Wars. | |
| Robert MacNeil | (author, former co-host, MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour): "I thought No Man's Land extraordinary for the searing, clear-eyed honesty of its approach. I was deeply moved. The simple but skilful construction creates an enormous accumulation of tension and foreboding towards an inexorable and heart-breaking conclusion. In obsessively re-analyzing the appalling, sometimes criminal foolishness of World War I, we may too easily dismiss the great hearts that fought it. This book will help us appreciate them afresh." | ||
| David Macfarlane | "Kevin Major has told one of Newfoundland's saddest stories with dignity and compassion. His details ring so true, and his voices are so believable that as his characters waited for the morning of July 1, 1916, I found myself hoping, against all reason, that the terrible hour would never come." | ||
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