Please welcome back author
Earl Staggs as he reviews The Officer’s
Code by Lyn Alexander. Earl just recently released his new novel Justified Action and is back at work
crafting a sequel to Memory Of A Murder. Earl will be teaching tomorrow and Saturday at the Northeast Texas Writers’ Organization
27th annual Spring Conference at the Mount Pleasant Civic Center.
Details are here. On Sunday Earl will be in the Lochwood neighborhood of Dallas
at LUCKY DOG BOOKS for a book signing with Denise Weeks and Jenny Milchman. The
event is scheduled at 1pm and you can read more about it here.
THE OFFICER’S CODE by Lyn Alexander
Reviewed by Earl Staggs
It is Edwardian England in 1912, and eighteen-year-old Eric
Foster’s life has been planned out for him by his tyrannical father, a
respected lawyer and judge. Eric is expected to graduate at the top of his
class at Cambridge and join his father’s law firm. Eric is not sure what he
wants to do with his life, but he is certain he does not want to be a lawyer. His
grades reflect his lack of interest in his studies, so his father packs him off
to a new school in Germany with dire directions to apply himself diligently and
achieve the goals dictated for him.
Once in Heidelberg, Eric is an outcast among his peers until
he is befriended by Gerdt Von Wittingen, a student his own age from a wealthy
German family, and they quickly become best friends and roommates. When Eric visits
Gerdt’s family’s mansion in the country, he meets Gerdt’s sister, Brigitte, an
exquisitely beautiful girl who is flirtatious, yet seems immature and childlike
in many ways. Eric considers her a reckless wildling who enjoys making fools of
the many men who pursue her.
Inevitably, Eric and Brigitte fall in love, and their
budding romance is written with an engaging hand by the author. When they
eventually talk of marriage, major obstacles arise. Eric’s father forbids the
marriage and orders his immediate return to England. Brigitte’s parents do not
feel Eric has the breeding and background necessary to join a family of their
high societal status. Eric’s solution to these problems is radical, drastic,
and surprising, but he succeeds in making the marriage possible.
The newlyweds face another major obstacle immediately when
World War One erupts in Europe. Now an officer in the German Imperial Cavalry
though barely out of his teens, Eric must lead his troop into battle against
the Russian Army. At home, Brigitte volunteers at the hospital to assist with
the wounded and sees the suffering and atrocities of war for herself. These two
young people become different adults during the period of the war, and must
face that fact if and when they are able to continue their marriage.
Reading the horrendous details of the war made me wonder if
the author had been there when it happened. That’s impossible, of course, so
she must have researched it thoroughly. Her descriptions of the fighting and the
effects of the war on the people involved will make you think you are there,
too. That’s how good her writing is.
I highly recommend this book. The author deftly writes of a lovely
romance and a horrific war as she chronicles the lives of two young people wearily
suffering through it not by choice but for the sake of their marriage, their
honor, their homeland and, for Eric, adherence to his Officer’s Code.
THE OFFICER’S CODE
Trade Paperback from Storyteller
Publishing
October 23, 2012
Available at Amazon Canada, Amazon US , B&N
October 23, 2012
Available at Amazon Canada, Amazon US , B&N
Get to know Lyn Alexander and read Chapter 1 at: http://www.lynalexander.com
Earl Staggs ©2013
"The Day I Almost Became a Great Writer"
http://www.earlwstaggs.wordpress.com
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