The Lost Soldier's Song

The Lost Soldier's Song
Author: Patrick McGinley
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2012-06-29
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1448209641

McGinley foregoes his usual murder mystery genre; instead, he presents an historical novel set during the Anglo-Irish War of 1919 to 1921. The story opens and closes with Declan Osborne in jail, being interrogated by British officers. In between, we learn of the sequence of events that has led him there. Set in Ireland at the time of the Black and Tans, Declan is a young man who sets out to join the cause full of doomed idealism.

Lost Soldiers

Lost Soldiers
Author: James Webb
Publisher: Dell
Total Pages: 466
Release: 2002-08-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0440240913

Once in a great while there comes a novel of such emotional impact and acute insight that it forever changes the way a reader sees a nation or an era. Writing with an unerring sense of suspense and of history experienced firsthand, James Webb takes us on a myth-shattering cultural odyssey deep into the heart of contemporary Vietnam, with a riveting thriller that tells a love story — love for those who perished, for family and friends, and between a soldier and the land where he had always been ready to die. Brandon Condley survived five years of combat as a U.S. Marine only to lose the woman he loved to an enemy assassin. Now he is back in Vietnam, working to recover the remains of unknown American soldiers. On a routine mission, Condley finds a body that doesn’t match its dog tags — a body that propels him into a vortex of violence and intrigue where past and present become one. As the mystery of the dead man unravels, a link is revealed to two well-known killers: “Salt and Pepper,” a pair of treasonous Americans who led a deadly Viet Cong ambush against Condley’s own men. Galvanized by a fresh trail to these long-lost deserters, Condley has finally found a purpose: Under the auspices of his government job, he is going to hunt down the traitors. On his own, he is going to kill them. Condley’s hunt cannot be kept secret from his former enemies, or his friends. And in the shadows that linger from Vietnam’s long season of darkness and terror, he has no way of knowing which side is more dangerous. Surrounding him is an unforgettable cast of characters: Dzung, Condley’s closest friend, a South Vietnamese war hero who might have led his country if his side had won the war, now reduced to driving a cyclo as his family starves in Saigon’s District Four. Colonel Pham, a battle-hardened Viet Cong soldier who lost three children to American bombs. Manh, a cutthroat Interior Ministry official who blackmails Dzung into a mission of murder. The Russian soldier Anatolie Petrushinsky, who left his soul in Vietnam as his empire collapsed around him. And the beautiful Van, Colonel Pham’s daughter, who spurns the scars of war as she pursues her dreams of freedom. As Condley stalks his elusive prey across old battlefields and throughout Eurasia, returning always to the brooding streets of Saigon, his mission — and the odds of his surviving it — grow more precarious with each step he takes toward the truth. Lost Soldiers captures the Vietnam of past and present — its beauty and squalor, its politics and people. Propelled by a page-turning mystery, shot through with adventure and intrigue, it irrevocably transforms our view of that haunted land and brings us as complete an understanding as we will ever have of what happened after the war — and why. No writer today is more qualified to take us into that world than James Webb.

Hymns for the Fallen

Hymns for the Fallen
Author: Todd Decker
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2017-02-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 0520282337

"This book describes in detail how music and sound function as a constituent part of the prestige combat film's larger work of memorialization in the cultural realm of commercial cinema. As Rikke Schubart and Anne Gjelsvik note, historians must deal with 'the complexity of history, war, heroism, patriotism, memory, and the process of their representation.' Hymns for the Fallen traces an expressive sonic continuity in this 'process of representation' for serious war films. The three elements of the soundtrack--dialogue, sound effects, music--are treated in detail in the chapters which follow, although music proves to be of particular interest."--Site de l'éditeur.

Sounds of War

Sounds of War
Author: Emma Hanna
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2020-03-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 110848008X

Music in all its forms was an indispensable part of everyday life in Britain's armed forces during the Great War.

Fighting Songs and Warring Words

Fighting Songs and Warring Words
Author: Brian Murdoch
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2002-01-08
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 113496904X

The accepted canon of war poetry usually includes only those underlining patriotic or nationalistic views. This study opens up the view of war poetry with the inclusion of such material as Nazi poetry and song, and the poetry of the atomic bomb.

The Lost Colony

The Lost Colony
Author: Kevin D. Randle
Publisher: Speaking Volumes
Total Pages: 213
Release:
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1645406601

ALL-ACTION SPACE COMBAT SERIES - JEFFERSON'S WAR THE LOST COLONY A young warrior risks his command—to free a planet of slaves. . . AN EMPTY WORLD An entire civilization has vanished from a lush planet—cities intact, no corpses, no trace of war. A human colonizing force boldly ventures to reinhabit the vacant planet. But in just two days the Terran settlers disappear, too. Their fate: unknown. INVASION FORCE Led by young Col. David Steven Jefferson, a U.S. Space Infantry battle group combs the galaxy looking for the home world of a cruel alien race—an enemy who has been secretly slave-raiding for centuries. This time, they've gone too far... THE LOST COLONY

Fabricating Lureland

Fabricating Lureland
Author: Julia Winckler
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 489
Release: 2021-12-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 3110734095

Through the analysis of surviving archival traces, this book constructs a history of the imagination and memory of the town of Peacehaven. Built as a speculative development atop iconic chalk cliffs on the Sussex Coast and marketed as a garden city by the sea, the estate quickly attracted adverse publicity. Influential voices such as the Bloomsbury group’s Virginia and Leonard Woolf, architect and writer Clough Williams-Ellis and the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England soon began to criticise it as a blot on the rolling, pastoral downland. Instead of reading and appraising Peacehaven’s story in a polarized way, this book breaks new ground by critically interpreting visual representations and commissioned photographs of the Estate and re-evaluating propositions from its inception, which aspired to secure improved public health and home ownership in direct response to the negative impact of industrialization and WWI. Focusing on the interwar period and tracing mutating agendas, the book investigates contested marketing and construction narratives through Histoire Croisée methodology and its intercrossings with memory and the imagination. By combining visual and creative research methods with oral history, multi-layered narratives of place come into focus. The study tracks the visual programme of the developer’s in-house magazine, Peacehaven Post, alongside previously underexplored blueprints, photographs, postcards and promotional guidebooks, and considers the garden city narrative as a form of social Utopia. Garden city ideals are once again evoked in debates as a potential solution to the ongoing national housing shortage, giving this research additional urgency as new large-scale redevelopment erases many of the few and fast disappearing original landmarks.

The Oxford Handbook of Music and Disability Studies

The Oxford Handbook of Music and Disability Studies
Author: Blake Howe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 953
Release: 2016
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0199331448

Like race, gender, and sexuality, disability is a social and cultural construction. Music, musicians, and music-making simultaneously embody and shape representations and narratives of disability. Disability -- culturally stigmatized minds and bodies -- is one of the things that music in all times and places can be said to be about.