Kirkus Reviews QR Code
PLACEMENT by Kimberly Van Sickle

PLACEMENT

by Kimberly Van Sickle

Pub Date: March 4th, 2025
ISBN: 9798891326415
Publisher: Atmosphere Press

A young soldier reflects on his privileged upbringing as he prepares to fight on D-Day.

The story opens on June 6, 1944, as soldier Charles Trammel is preparing to land at Normandy. Through flashbacks, he reflects on his youth, education, and the complicated family dynamics (his father is from a storied political family; his mother hails from a working-class Irish Catholic background) that shaped him. Charles is a privileged teenager navigating bumpy personal waters as World War II approaches. Much of his story takes place at Trammel Academy, a prestigious prep school named for his family where Charles has a strict classical literature teacher in Mrs. Verardi (who will prove to influence him significantly). At home, Charles’ family is often at war; a dramatic dinner culminates in Charles’ liberal mother challenging his grandfather, a conservative senator, who dies later that night from a heart attack. Charles is drawn to his chauffeur, Chauncey, a surrogate father figure whose background helps Charles begin to understand social inequality and the value of character over class. As the war draws closer, Charles finds himself rejecting the expectation that a senator’s son would avoid frontline combat. He joins the military, facing the brutal reality of war. In his final moments before the big battle, Charles acknowledges how the pivotal experiences and relationships in his life have defined him more than his last name. Van Sickle alternates between the fighting on Omaha Beach and the flashbacks to Charles’ youth to craft an engrossing narrative of personal awakening that tackles lofty themes of privilege, identity, and moral courage. The characters are compelling, particularly Charles and two of his prep-school peers, the manipulative and charismatic Jackson Inverness and the gentle and introspective Chilton McGovern (“His father was a first-generation Scottish steel baron and looked like a Viking. As did his mother. And his sister”). The dual timeline works well, allowing readers to track Charles’ evolution as a person and the ways in which the past has shaped his present. Part war story and part coming-of-age tale, this novel is a compelling read.

A captivating chronicle of personal growth and the people and events that influenced it.