Retrato do autor

Mackenzie Ford

Autor(a) de Gifts of War

4 Works 389 Membros 54 Críticas

About the Author

Obras por Mackenzie Ford

Gifts of War (2009) 183 exemplares
The Clouds Beneath the Sun (2009) 178 exemplares
The Kissing Gates (2008) 27 exemplares
un amour dérobé 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome legal
Watson, Peter Frank
Outros nomes
Watson, Peter
Data de nascimento
1943-04-23
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
UK
Local de nascimento
Birmingham, England, UK
Locais de residência
London, England, UK
Educação
Durham University (BA, Psychology, 1964)
University of London (PhD)
Rome University

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Random House: Mackenzie Ford is the nom de plume of a well-known and respected writer of history whose books are published in seventeen languages. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the London Times, the Observer, the Spectator and the Sunday Times. He was for ten years a research associate at the Macdonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge, during which time he wrote a book that was voted by Time magazine as one of the ten best books of 2006.

http://www.randomhouse.com/author/res...

Membros

Críticas

Read in May, 2013
Format Hardcover (edit)
Review Gifts of War opens in the trenches with the WWI Christmas Truce of 1914.

British second lieutenant Hal Montgomery tells his soldiers to hold their fire.
Hal faces Oberleutnant Wilhelm Wetzlar in the "informal, unauthorized truce."
Hal is proficient in German and Wilhelm in English.

Wilhelm shows a picture of a beautiful young English woman (Sam) (Sally Ann Margaret Ross),his fianc��. ...
He was in England, prewar, in an exchange course.
They fell in love and were engaged before he was recalled to Germany.

"I have a favor, Hal"....
"This is a photo of me in uniform.....
Sam of course, has never seen it....
Can you see she gets it?" ....
The first thing I will do when this war is over is go looking for her.
This photo will tell her all she needs to know"

The story is fueled by layer after layer of deception, as Hal meet and falls in love with Sam.
The photo remains hidden and the request unspoken.

Hal (post injury) is now in military intelligence.
His ventures provide the dangerous, fast paced portion of the novel.

Til novel's end, we walk among "corrosive" and penetrating effects of war ( on military and civilian).

The ending?...no comment...read the story and let me know what you think. (
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
pennsylady | 15 outras críticas | Jan 14, 2015 |
You know, I think until the last chapter of this book I was almost considering giving it 5 stars, and after the last chapter I was going to downgrade it to 2, such was the difference the last chapter made in how I felt about it. Against my better judgement I'm going to split the difference even though the final chapter really ruined my over-all impression of the book. I don't know how your tagline can be 'Love-whatever the cost' and end it the way it ended.

Ignoring the final chapter, there was lots about this book I liked. The setting at an archaeological dig in Kenya was fascinating, as was the history of the local Masai tribe and the politics between tribal law and 'white' law in the time period. It basically ticked a lot of boxes in terms of my own interests lie.

The main character is Natalie - a 20 something who joins the dig in Kenya of a renowned archaeologist Eleanor Deacon. Natalie is nursing her wounds after the death of her mother, estrangement from her father and the abandonment of her married lover and goes to the gorge to work.

An important discover is made almost immediately on her arrival and she suggests that before the scientists who made the discovery can jump the gun and publish their findings, that they compare the bones they found with more recent bones. The two doctors, unwilling to wait for proper procedure then go and raid a Masai grave, stealing bones in order to verify their findings.

The grave robbing is what sets the rest of the events of the book into motion as one of the doctors is murdered by a Masai man and Natalie is the only one who can identify that the man was in the vicinity of the murder scene.

The book for me is at its most successful when it is dealing with the cultural complexities between what is acceptable under different rules of law. There is a political under-current in the book, where you see scientists trying to broker ways in which to protect their findings, while placating two very different sides in a country on the brink of independence as both sides are attempting to get a foothold in the new Kenya and see the trial as a way to make it happen.

The characters were generally well rounded and complex. Natalie could have perhaps been a little less self-involved (I was almost at the stage of wanting to throttle her at times in the book for mentioning Dominic) and perhaps a little too rigid in her thinking regarding the multiple marriages acceptable in Masai society considering she, herself, had been quite happy to engaged in a relationship with a married lover. I would say that her appeal to the men around the camp was a little ridiculous, but they were in the middle of nowhere and she was an attractive, intelligent woman so I suppose options were limited considering the only other woman available was Eleanor who was in her 60's. ;)

The dynamics between Natalie and the Deacons - both with Eleanor and Eleanor's sons (Christopher and Jack) was pretty fascinating. Eleanor, the older matriarch of the archaeological world who ran her digs with an iron fist was actually extremely likeable for me, even as she riled Natalie up. Christopher, a quiet and introverted guy seemed almost fascinated with Natalie, but he was slow to act until his brother arrived and then it almost became more about his own jealous nature than anything else. Jack was charming, and intelligent and passionate and a very easy character to like and it was easy to see why Natalie was drawn to him (even if at times it wasn't always easy to see why he was drawn to Natalie.)

As I said, the book does a lot right and if it hadn't been for the ending then I think I would have really loved it. As it was, as a woman for me, it was extremely upsetting to see Jack's feelings so reliant on whether or not Natalie would give him an opportunity to procreate. Perhaps it's just me, but it really upset me a lot to not only read that she had lost her father and her unborn child, but that because, through no fault of her own, she had also lost the ability to have children that Jack would then take back his marriage proposal, leaving her on her own. Nothing like unconditional love.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
sunnycouger | 35 outras críticas | Sep 20, 2013 |
This is an interesting look at WWI from a British perspective, especially regarding the analysis of military intelligence. The main character, Hal Montgomery, is an English officer who meets his German counterpart during a Christmas truce. When the German officer asks a favor of Hal, Hal's fate is sealed. During the course of the book, Hal demonstrates his weakness of character. It is difficult to overlook his dishonesty in dealing with his lover and the cavalier way he disregards his pledge of secrecy as a government official. Perhaps the ending is a fitting tribute to a man whose moral compass is off kilter, but it is still disturbing.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
pdebolt | 15 outras críticas | Dec 1, 2012 |
Esta crítica foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Críticos do LibraryThing.
Overall, I liked this book about a scandal-plagued anthropological dig in early 1960s Kenya. I enjoyed the will they/won't they romance at the center of the story and the intrigue surrounding Natalie, the main character, and her colleagues on the dig. But while I found the history and science that surround the plot to be interesting and often necessary to the story as a whole, I do feel that the author could have found ways to more seamlessly fit it into the novel.

I was also somewhat surprised by what I thought to be an abrupt ending which wasn't really helped by the two paragraph note at the end of the book which included both factual anthropological information as well as a brief follow-up about the two main characters.… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
sshartelg | 35 outras críticas | Feb 15, 2012 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
4
Membros
389
Popularidade
#62,204
Avaliação
½ 3.3
Críticas
54
ISBN
16

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