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TWO STORM WOOD by Philip Gray

TWO STORM WOOD

by Philip Gray

Pub Date: March 29th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-393-54188-5
Publisher: Norton

British author Gray lays bare the horrors of World War I through an Englishwoman’s battlefield search for her fiance.

Before the war, music teacher Edward Haslam and Amy Vanneck fall in love and become secretly engaged, although he is beneath her class, socially a nobody. He hates war, which “poisons everything that it does not destroy,” yet he answers England’s call and becomes a captain of the Seventh Manchesters. Of course, the lovers exchange letters. Then, in early 1919, when the war is newly over, English soldiers must scour the battlefields of northern France to identify rat-eaten corpses and properly bury them. It’s a gruesome, smelly, necessary task. Edward is among the missing, and Amy decides to travel to France to search for him on her own, well aware that he is most likely dead. In a hospital, a wounded soldier tells her to “look for your damned sweetheart” under Two Storm Wood. That’s the label on army maps for a former German stronghold, under which lies a vast network of tunnels packed with explosives and teeming with rats. The army dismisses rumors that deserters are hiding there and that someone may have murdered a group of noncombatant Chinese laborers. There’s no hint of irony here: only horror at the possibility of murder while surrounded by nations’ organized killings. Amy is determined to know Edward’s fate for better or worse. This, to her, is what it means to be in love—to find her man dead or alive, deserter or not. But there are those who don’t want her to know a dark secret about Two Storm Wood, and they are willing to kill. Combat creates Edward's dramatic arc from “the lover, the music teacher” to “the expert close-quarter killer” who sneaks up to enemy trenches and slits throats with a knuckle knife. The scenes of death are unsparing in their grimness, but nothing will stop Amy Vanneck.

Powerful historical fiction and a testament to war’s insanity.

Powerful historical fiction and a testament to war’s insanity.