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A review by eclectictales
The Cartographer of No Man's Land by P.S. Duffy
3.0
It took me a little while to warm up to the story as all of the principal characters had to be introduced as well as the problems that they were facing. The story goes back and forth between the Front and what was happening back in Nova Scotia. I was personally much more interesting with the storyline happening in the front, though both are important in painting the whole picture of the war and its impact both to people involved at the front and the loved ones left behind. Survival is an important theme in this novel and takes different forms both at the front and back at home with the internment issues. Everyone has their own way of surviving through the horrors and obstacles before them.
The Cartographer of No Man’s Land can be a bit of a disconnected experience to read but it is nonetheless a well-written, well-researched novel that brought the realities and experiences of the First World War to life as well as the constancy of life itself, how relationships keep on changing and how lives keep on going regardless of a major war raging an ocean away. I did think that the novel ended at a rather strange point, like the resolution was still midair. I recommend this novel for readers of historical fiction and novels that take place in and around the First World War.
You can read this review in its entirety over at caffeinatedlife.net: http://www.caffeinatedlife.net/blog/2013/11/11/review-the-cartographer-of-no-mans-land/
The Cartographer of No Man’s Land can be a bit of a disconnected experience to read but it is nonetheless a well-written, well-researched novel that brought the realities and experiences of the First World War to life as well as the constancy of life itself, how relationships keep on changing and how lives keep on going regardless of a major war raging an ocean away. I did think that the novel ended at a rather strange point, like the resolution was still midair. I recommend this novel for readers of historical fiction and novels that take place in and around the First World War.
You can read this review in its entirety over at caffeinatedlife.net: http://www.caffeinatedlife.net/blog/2013/11/11/review-the-cartographer-of-no-mans-land/