Sunday, September 17, 2023

Review of THE WINTER SOLDIER by Daniel Mason

 


Daniel Mason lives in California and is an MD and psychiatrist. I read The Winter Soldier on my Kindle. It tells the heartbreaking story of Lucius—a young man from a well-off military family who decides on medicine as a career against the wishes of his family. Just before he completes his medical degree in Vienna, WWI intervenes and the Austro-Hungarian empire is thrown into chaos. The young man, wishing to contribute to the war effort, enlists in the army and is sent as a medic to a casualty station located in a barely Carpathian village church.

From here on we get the story of the war, not from the trenches as in All Quiet on the Western Front, but from the hospitals where the physically maimed and psychologically scarred are dumped to be treated. Lucius is faced with barbaric sanitation, sparse medical equipment, limited drugs, and precious little food. He is relegated primarily to cutting off destroyed limbs while also attempting to cure lice, typhus, and the scourge of what was called “shell shock” in WWI and is now known as PTSS (Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome).

Dr. Mason spares the reader none of the stench, the blood, the suffering, and the violence that goes on behind the front lines. His diligently researched book is not for the delicate or faint of heart, but the reward is that, In spite of the conditions, Lucius manages to find romance in the person of a nun named Marguerite, who is the head nurse at the facility.

The young medic is separated from his hospital when the battle lines change, which leaves the last third of the novel to tell the story of his tragic search for his lost love. Some reviewers have even compared the book to Boris Pasternack’s Dr. Zhivago.

Mason uses his own medical knowledge with acute precision, while combining it with the history of medicine and the societal and human conflicts embodied in World War One. The title really tells it all. It reflects the chill of a landscape and a war that is rife with blizzards. The weather is as much an enemy as the opposing army and over it all hangs the pall of the horror of war. That human beings can still locate emotional warmth in this horrendous milieu is a heartwarming tribute to resiliency.

Definitely a 4.8 out of 5 for me, but a reminder that it does contain violent description. 

 

Wednesday, September 06, 2023

Review of Fatal Legacy by Lindsey Davis

 


Are you one of the many who enjoy traditional “who dunnits” set in exotic or historical places?  If you are, British authoress Lindsey Davis may be just your cup of tea. She has written a slew of comical, historical mysteries set in ancient Rome. There have been over twenty in the Marcus Didius Falco series and 2023’s Fatal Legacy is the 11th in the Flavia Alba series. Flavia, if you are not already familiar with her, is Marcus Didius Falco’s intelligent, high spirited and courageous daughter. She takes on similar cases to her father as an “Informer,” which is a sort of ancient investigator similar to today’s private eye. She also, like her dad, has a wicked sense of humor that exploits the legal, political, eating, drinking, and sexual habits of all levels of ancient Roman society. Is this just inventive trash talking? Not at all.  According to a classicist friend of mine. “Her history and geography is spot on.”

 In Fatal Legacy Flavia takes what seems like a simple case of getting the goods on a guy who skipped out on a restaurant tab.  This minor infraction turns quickly into a sinister and convoluted multi- generational family feud over citizenship and inheritance rights. The plot has more twists than a licorice stick and you will be laughing all the way through to the violent climax.   

 I haven’t read all of the Falco family books, but the ones I have read I have enjoyed immensely. They are light hearted, satirical, and deftly plotted.

I give this one a 4 out of 5.

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