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Operation Heartbreak
 
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Operation Heartbreak (Paperback)

by Max Arthur (Author), Duff Cooper (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
RRP: £12.00
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Product details

  • Paperback: 168 pages
  • Publisher: Persephone Books Ltd (22 Sep 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 190315541X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1903155417
  • Product Dimensions: 18.8 x 14 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 143,029 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Book Description

Operation Heartbreak's hero is called Willie Maryngton; the central tragedy of his life was that he was too young to fight in the First World War and too old for the Second. Willie 'knew perfectly well that when a regiment went abroad on active service some officers and men were left behind. But he had never thought that he would be among those officers. The Colonel had talked about the first scrap, but that was just the scrap he wanted to be in. He had said something about heavy casualties. Willie minded little how heavy they were if he was in it, but how could he bear to sit at home, hoping that his brother officers would be killed so that he could take their place?'

In the end Willie does play a vital part in the Allies' eventual victory, in what has become one of the most famous incidents of the war; but although this is a novel dominated by the fact of war, it iis the touching evocation of Willie's life that forms the core of the books. Norman Shrapnel wrote (in the Manchester Guardian when the book was originally published): 'Operation Heartbreak has been widely praised but too little attention has surely been paid to the remarkable skill with which the author maintains our interest in his hero, a soldier presented with an affectionate irony and never romanticised. This is a rare book, written with wonderful economy and perfect timing.'

Indeed, because Operation Heartbreak is, in the words of the New York Herald Tribune, 'a work of jewel-like brevity and intensity more expected in French than in English', it should certainly take its place beside other, similar classics such as Reunion by Fred Uhlman, Strange Meeting by Susan Hill and A Month in the Country by JL Carr - short novels about war which are quiet, domestic, poignant and understated.

The writer Emma Smith, author of The Far Cry, comments: 'I remember weeping copiously over Operation Heartbreak when I first read it - it is a deeply-moving book, beautifully written.' And Nina Bawden told Persephone Books, when she heard we were reprinting Operation Heartbreak: 'It is the novel I enjoyed more than any other in the immediate post-war years, and one I have read many times since with undiminished pleasure and growing admiration for Duff Cooper's skill. It is a story of why men go to war, it is also a heart-wrenching love story; a wonderful novel by a masterly writer that should be on everyone's bookshelf - and not borrowed but bought.'


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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars An unexpected masterpiece, 25 May 2009
By G. Dutton (London) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This utterly brilliant - apparently simple, almost spare - short novel has the most breathtaking ending. The best, in fact, I've ever read.

Duff Cooper's novel narrates the somewhat sorry life and career of Willie Maryngton, a soldier who misses out on his ambition of seeing military action. Too young for the first world war, he receives his commission in 1918 - just in time to hear that the armistice has been signed. When the second world war brakes out his age (early 40s) keeps him at home to train younger officers. He longs to fight, to represent his country, and he can't understand why most men long for peacetime.

Just as Willie is kept at arm's length from the war so the reader is only sparingly reminded of it through the book. What we see is a somewhat innocent rather awkward man - one who is naive about other human beings - who tries to do his best. In India he falls in love with a colonel's daughter, quickly assumes marriage is what should happen next, and is horribly let down. Back in England he falls for a childhood playmate - a frustrating relationship that is never realised, yet Willie's love and devotion to her is lifelong and wonderful in its way. And in the end his love is returned - that it comes too late does nothing to dampen the emotion.

And, finally Willie does get to serve his country. In fact, his role proves key in a twist that comes from one of the most phenomenal war stories. When the book was first published in 1950 the reviews were full of questions as to whether it disclosed a ruse employed by British Military Intelligence during a vital stage of the war. Whilst at the time both Duff Cooper and the War Office apparently denied the veracity of the final episode of his novel it is remarkably close to something that really happened.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Poignant view of one man's non-effect on two world wars - worth reading, 19 Nov 2008
By BumbleBee (France) - See all my reviews
I discovered this on our family bookshelves, whilst hunting for light easy fiction - inscribed by my grandfather after a review he'd read in the Sunday Express on 01/02/1953, noting that the story is apparantly based on fact - we know it as 'The man who never was'. Poignant review of how one man missed out on his "burning desire to fight for his country" in two world wars, but ended up possibly helping the Allies in a way no one else could have. I would recommend this to anyone who likes reading, and perhaps thinking a little too. Another era has passed since then, but the story still wears the telling.
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